ON DEMAND: Motivational Interviewing for Victim Advocates
Help clients find their motivation to move forward and heal.
Welcome to the Course
All about the learning platform
Course Syllaus
FREE PREVIEWWhat is Motivational Interviewing?
FREE PREVIEWAmbivalence
FREE PREVIEWDemonstration #1 (Audio Only)
The Righting Reflex
FREE PREVIEWOptional Personal Reflection: Righting Reflex
The Spirit of MI (Acronym: PACE)
FREE PREVIEWOptional Personal Reflection: Empathy
Quiz #1
Change Talk and Sustain Talk
Key Points About Motivational Interviewing
Equipoise
Skill building, part 1: Open Ended Questions
Skill building, part 2: Affirmations
Skill building, part 3: Reflective Listening 1/2
Skill building, part 4: Reflective Listening 2/2
Skill building, part 5: Summaries
Demonstration #2 (Audio Only)
Demonstration (YouTube Video)
Optional Self Reflection: Skill Building
Lesson 1: MI is Trauma-Informed
Optional Self Reflection: Further Learning
Quiz #2
Next Steps
Power-based violence— the kind of harm that is inflicted upon individuals or groups due to power imbalances— targets marginalized communities and violates their rights to human dignity. Addressing power-based violence requires challenging power structures, promoting equality, and fostering inclusive and respectful environments for all. Victim advocacy refers to the support provided to individuals who have experienced some form of power-based violence: domestic violence, sexual assault, child abuse, human trafficking, and coercive control. Advocates help victims navigate the legal, medical, and social systems, provide crisis intervention, facilitate safety planning, and provide court accompaniment when necessary. The primary goal of victim advocacy is to empower victims and help them regain control over their lives in the aftermath of violence or oppression. To put it simply, advocates help people move forward to a brighter, safer, and freer future, even when something terrible has happened in the past. This book shares best practices in motivational interviewing (MI) for victim advocates. Developed in the early 1980s by psychologists William R. Miller and Stephen Rollnick, motivational interviewing was originally designed as a way to have collaborative conversations with people about their alcohol consumption. Over time, Miller and Rollnick have illustrated the utility of MI across many new and emerging areas: healthcare, leadership and management, fitness, education, athletic training, and more. As always, Miller and Rollnick remain the authority on the development of MI, and this book provides applications to the field of victim advocacy.
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