Title: Helping Highly Anxious Students
1Helping Highly Anxious Students
- Dr. Greg Schoepp
- Chartered Psychologist
- gschoepp_at_cha.ab.ca
- (780) 407-7075
- Capital Health Authority
- University of Alberta Hospital
- Stollery Childrens Hospital
2What is Anxiety?
- A complex pattern of behavioral, cognitive, and
physical reactions to a real or imagined threat. - Physical responses heart rate, sweating, muscle
tension, skin temperature, stomach upset. - Cognitive/affective responses thoughts of being
scared, danger, self critical thoughts, hyper
sensitivity to physical symptoms - Behavior responses avoidance, trembling voice,
crying, anger outburst, loss of emotional control
3Relationship Between Thoughts and Feelings
- Emotions are a direct result of your thoughts and
beliefs about an event. - Event Thought/belief Emotional
- Reaction
- attending might be useful motivation
- anxiety session interest
4Characteristics of Anxious Students
- get upset at changes in routines or at mistakes
- is a loner or prefers small group of safe
people - limited social skills, refuse to participate in
social activities - difficulty separating from caregiver at start of
day - associated health issues - asthma, severe
allergies - poor concentration, irritability, restlessness,
distractibility
5Characteristics of Anxious Students
- Learning problems and anxiety
- increased anxiety about being different
- black white thinking style, hard to
differentiate exaggerated vs realistic worries - more rigid, inflexible approach
- combination of issues -i.e. tourettes, ADHD,
lower cognitive functioning
6Viewing the World as Dangerous
- thinking biases - more threatening
interpretations of ambiguous situations - overestimate likelihood unpleasant event
occurring or overestimating probability - overestimate how negative consequences will be if
event happens, catastrophizing outcomes - preference for poor coping responses
- enhanced memory for threatening information
7Types of Anxiety
- Separation Anxiety
- Generalized Anxiety
- Specific phobia
- Specific Phobia
- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
- Panic Attack
- Panic Disorder
- Acute Post Traumatic Stress
- Adjustment Disorder
- School Refusal (not in DSM-IV)
8Ineffective Teacher Responses
- excessively reassure the student, for example,
repeatedly telling the student that "every thing
will be all right - being too directive. Tell the student exactly how
to handle the situation - remove the student from the feared the situation
or allow the child to avoid the situation
9Ineffective Teacher Responses
- empathize with student's anxiety by discussing in
detail what makes them anxious and afraid.
Modeling anxious behavior - become impatient with the student, frustration,
anger
10Effective Teacher Responses
- reward brave, non anxious behavior
- ignore anxious, clingy behavior you don't want,
especially when child seeks reassurance from you
that "everything will be all right" - help student to find their own solutions. Coach
student to problem solve. Increase coping
thoughts, challenge negative self talk. Expect
good things to happen
11Effective Teacher Responses
- model brave, non anxious behavior
- prevent avoidance
- provide opportunities for developing
independence, i.e. run message to office for you - allow student to experience natural consequences
of their fear - encourage help-seeking (i.e. school counsellor)
and destigmatise the issue
12Effective Teacher Responses
- encourage gradual exposure to fear. With
students help, establish set of challenges to
help overcome fears - when possible and appropriate, develop exposure
with parents who provide incentives for success
(reward effort) - refer student for specialist help when anxiety
over whelming
13Anxiety ThermometerFor Young children
Small Worry MediumWorry Big worry
1 2 3
14Relaxation Strategies
- address the physical reaction when feeling
worried, nervous or afraid - awareness of body clues, i.e. feeling ill before
math test - relaxation
- robot/ragdoll exercise
- progressive muscle relaxation
- deep breathing
- visualization
15Four Steps to Challenging Anxious Thoughts
- 1. Identify thought behind emotion - have student
state what they worry might happen - Ill make a mistake and people will laugh at
me - 2. Look for evidence - use questions with student
- Past experience
- Alternative possibilities
- General Knowledge
- Take Different Perspective (adolescents)
16Four Steps to Challenging Anxious Thoughts
- 3. Evaluate Thought on Basis of Evidence
- How likely is it that the bad thing Im
expecting will actually happen? - Use percentages or descriptors, not likely
- 4. Examine Consequences of Feared Event
- For adolescents-challenging consequences
- What is the worst that could happen here?
- Formulate coping strategies
-
17Addressing Anxious Thoughts
- Realistic Thinking or Detective Thinking (Rapee,
2000) Thought Challengers (Barrett, 2000) - (event) What is happening?
-
- (thought) What am I thinking?
- Worry rating? 1-10
-
18- (evidence) What are the facts? What do I know
about the situation? - What happened before when I was worried?
- What else could happen?
- What is likely to happen?
- How likely is it that the bad thing Im
expecting will actually happen? - (coping) What is my helpful (realistic thought)?
- What will I do to cope with this situation?
19Evidence Questions for Older Students
- Have I ever been in a situation like this before,
and was it really that bad? - How many times has this terrible thing actually
happened before? - What will most likely happen in this situation?
- What is the worst thing that can really happen?
- Am I 100 sure that this will happen?
- What else might that person be thinking about me?
- So what if the situation does not go perfectly?
- Am I the only person who has ever had to deal
with this situation?
20Simplifying Realistic ThinkingJanice, age 11
- (Evidence)
- Check things out
- What do I see?
- What do I hear?
- What do I smell?
- What do I feel?
21Simplifying Realistic ThinkingJanice, age 11
22Fear and Worry List
- These things are really hard to do Worry
Scale (0-10) - __________________________________________________
________________________________ - __________________________________________________
________________________________ - These things are hard to do
- __________________________________________________
________________________________ - __________________________________________________
________________________________ - These things make me a little worried
- __________________________________________________
________________________________ - __________________________________________________
________________________________
23Fear and Worry List ExampleAmber, age 12, grade 7
- Skating competitions 10
- Away from family, mom 9
- Giving speech 8
- Getting interviewed 10
- Going somewhere on
- my own 10
- _____________________________________________
- Making friends 7
- Lunch at school 5
- Late for school 7
- Shopping w/o parents 7
- Talking to strangers 7
- _______________________________________________
- Falling asleep 4
- Being with people I dont
- know 4
- Giving my opinion 3
- Being dark by self 2
24Step by Step Plan (Exposure Hierarchy)
- My Goal Not to be bothered by making mistakes
at school - STEP 10 Dont have correct textbook for a
lesson - STEP 9 Deliberately give wrong answer to a
question in class - STEP 8 Forget to return library books on
library day - STEP 7 Answer question in class without being
100 sure - STEP 6 Hand in assignment with two spelling
errors - STEP 5 Draw doodle in margin of page to turn
in - STEP 4 Make deliberate mistake in math
exercise - STEP 3 Dont bring permission slip back to
school on first due date - STEP 2 Cross out homework mistake and hand in
without rewriting - STEP 1 Listen to music for half hour before
doing homework after school
25Making Exposure Effective
- fears are faced gradually, slightly difficult to
most difficult - student experiences progression in difficulty and
anxiety - student must remain in situation long enough to
confirm negative belief is not true - practice and repetition keys to success. Student
learns situation is not threatening
26Its Hard Work, Rewards Help
- help students evaluate their performance in terms
of partial success - for older children - Think like a winner
-
- The situation was..
- Positive aspects of the situation were
- Things I could improve on next time...
27Its Hard Work, Rewards Help
- for younger children- performance barometer for
self-evaluation - How well did I cope?
- Super Well, Well, Okay, A little, Didnt try
very hard, Didnt try at all - negotiate reward/incentive for each step before
starting plan, parents are important here - rewards for large steps or milestones important
28Social Skills Competence
- body language skills - eye contact, posture,
facial expression - voice quality skills - tone, volume, clarity
- conversational skills - greetings
introductions, initiating and maintaining
conversations - instruction, rehearsal feedback, practice
- modelling most effective (video, modelling by
teacher or peer)
29Social Skills Rehearsal (Rapee et al.., 2000)
- Conversation game - 30 second paired conversation
with prompted cues, job interview (adolescents) - hobby talk, tale time ( 3 min. reading or
speech), in the movies (act out scripts) - conversation brainstorm, movie scriptwriter
(adolescents), scenario game
30Social Skills Practice
- set tasks where student can practice skills in
real-life situations - graded exposure tasks to increase skills and
confidence - use school activities and assignments as practice
situations - i.e. class presentation, paired
reading
31Assertiveness Training (Rapee et al., 2000)
- helping students differentiate assertive, wimpy
(passive), and grouchy (aggressive) behavior - develop skills in non-verbal and verbal assertive
behavior - rehearse with role plays and real-life situations
- practice in front of mirror, with family members,
groups of students
32Assertiveness Training (Rapee et al., 2000)
- Assertiveness Checklist
- strong EYE contact
- good POSTURE
- clear VOICE
- SAY WHAT YOU WANT politely (content)
- APPEAR confident
- BEHAVE appropriately
33Assertiveness Training (Rapee et al., 2000)
- Outsmarting Bullies
- TALK to others
- get an AUDIENCE
- do something DIFFERENT
- develop CLEVER COME-BACKS
- Tease Youre so stupid
- Come-back Youre observant, ever thought of
being a news reporter?
34Importance of School Environment
- anxiety problem not necessarily within child or
home-based - responses of teachers, administrators, other
staff can be crucial - deal with differences in how staff conceptualize
childs problem - important in JH and SH grades - effective teachers DO make a positive difference
for anxious students
35When and How to Refer Families For Help
- when child is overwhelmed, unable to cope
- community counselling agencies
- family physician or pediatrician referral
- psychologists
- child psychiatrists
- medication
- self-help books