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Negotiating Positive Identity in a Group Care Community - Reclaiming Uprooted Youth (Hardcover)
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Negotiating Positive Identity in a Group Care Community - Reclaiming Uprooted Youth (Hardcover)
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In this readable book, Zvi Levy, Hadassim s Director, provides a
careful account of how, over time, he and others have shaped a
community to foster health, identity, and competence in distressed
young people. Canadian WIZO (Women s International Zionist
Organization) Hadassim is a thriving youth village in Israel that
is home for 500 young people and a day educational program for an
additional 1,000. Negotiating Positive Identity in a Residential
Group Care Community illustrates the organizational expression of a
developmental idea, in this case Erik Erikson s identity
development theory, to show how an environment can be created to
cope with disrupted development processes among children and
adolescents. The book describes an ongoing experiment that started
fifteen years ago and has since been recognized as an outstanding
success. The basic information and ideas expressed by Levy can be
used to improve the effectiveness of any framework through which
adolescents pass during the stages of development, including
schools, community centers, and normal families. Some of the main
topics discussed in this volume are: principles for running a
multicultural facility organization of the daily life of a large
residential setting major parameters in a residential setting as
derived from the theories of Erik Erikson on adolescence as a
developmental stage comprehensive care for youth in transition and
adolescents suffering from aggravated identity crisesAll child and
youth care workers and program administrators can learn much from
Levy s account of Hadassim. Negotiating Positive Identity in a
Residential Group Care Community will be disturbing to many who
adhere to the current tenets of good management and child care
practice; readers need to be prepared to have many assumptions and
beliefs challenged. The book emphasizes the distress of immigrant
and troubled urban youth as an aggravated identity crisis, the
cause of which needs to be treated before the symptom. This volume
is of interest to theoreticians, practitioners, and policymakers in
the fields of education, child and youth care, and developmental
psychology, as well as scholars in Erikson s theories. It is also
useful in courses which study education in Israel or that seek
solutions to problems such as homeless youth in the Third
World.Negotiating Positive Identity in a Residential Group Care
Community stresses that: The answer to deprivation is not the
provision of efficient services, but an environment and an approach
that encourages adolescents to see themselves as active
participants and not as patients or passive inmates. Residential
settings for children and adolescents can successfully handle large
numbers and, in fact, larger numbers can offer some definite
advantages. The best way to help children develop into autonomous
adults is to give them responsibility for their own choices within
the framework of a goal-oriented community.
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