Facilitation Skills for Cognitive Behavioral Programs in Corrections

Ceiling: $250,000
Applications Due: Closed
Federal
U.S. Department of Justice (National Institute of Corrections)

The "Facilitation Skills for Cognitive Behavioral Programs in Corrections" grant aims to fund training for facilitators in cognitive behavioral therapy techniques, with the goal of improving social skills, problem-solving, and self-control among justice-involved adults and at-risk youth, ultimately reducing recidivism and addressing problematic behaviors.

Description

Perhaps no other intervention has attracted more attention across the criminal justice system than cognitivebehavioral therapy (CBT). First widely used in the latter half of the 20th century, as large numbers of peoplewith mental illness were deinstitutionalized and treated in community settings, CBT has since found its wayinto nearly every aspect of the justice system, often supplementing, or displacing other programs andinterventions. CBT assumes that most people can become conscious of their own thoughts and behaviorsand then make positive changes to them. A person's thoughts are often the result of experience, and behavioris often influenced and prompted by these thoughts. In addition, thoughts may sometimes become distortedand fail to reflect reality accurately. Practitioners today use CBT to reduce recidivism among adults andjuveniles, help victims deal with the aftermath of crimes, and address substance abuse, depression, violence,and other problematic behavior. CBT programs help individuals in corrections improve their social skills,means-ends problem solving, critical reasoning, moral reasoning, cognitive style, self-control, impulsemanagement, and self-efficacy. Effective facilitators are crucial to assisting to make these improvementsand reductions. The ideal skills for group facilitators include empathy, knowledge of facilitation/teachingtechniques, understanding group processes and interpersonal interactions, the ability to control a group ofjustice-involved adults and at-risk youth, and the ability to challenge individuals through non-coercivemeans. Almost without exception, studies of cognitive behavioral programs point to proper training as a keyfactor in achieving desired program outcomes. Training is the starting point for successful facilitators.

Eligibility

States
All
Regions
All
Eligible Entities
Nonprofits, Native American tribal organizations, For profit organizations other than small businesses, Public and State controlled institutions of higher education, Private institutions of higher education

Funding

Program Funding
$250,000
Award Ceiling
$250,000
Award Floor
Award Count
1

Timing

Posted Date
August 19, 2024
App Status
No Longer Accepting Applications
Pre-app Deadline
Application Deadline
October 15, 2024

Funder

Funding Source
Source Type
Federal
Contact Name
Cameron D Coblentz
Contact Email
Contact Phone

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