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Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry Rosanne Kerr, M.Ed. Daniel Tomasulo, Ph.D.

Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

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Page 1: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative

Inquiry Rosanne Kerr, M.Ed.

Daniel Tomasulo, Ph.D.

Page 2: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Some Introductions

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has. – Margaret Mead

Page 3: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Discover “What gives life?”

Appreciating the best of what is…

Dream “What might be?”

Brainstorming for our vision…

Design

“What should be?” Designing new models…

Destiny “How to empower, learn

and create/adjust?” Sustaining momentum …

Affirmative Topic Choice

Model the Appreciative Inquiry 4-D Process for Change

Page 4: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Discovery Phase

•  What are your strengths?

•  What are the strengths of your organization?

•  What is the best of what is? What should you keep as you move into the future?

Page 5: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Outcomes for This Workshop

“One among several purposes behind the use of stories in positive psychology is to bring research to life.”

D.J. Tomasulo and J.O. Pawelski (2012)

Page 6: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

The Education to Empowerment Model (R. Biswas-Diener, 2010)

Ø Education – Applying the principles of positive Psychology & Appreciative Inquiry (AI) benefits your organization

Ø Inspiration – Share examples of how we brought Positive Psychology & Appreciative Inquiry research to life in our organization

Ø Empowerment – Show workshop participants that they also have the ability to implement positive psychology and AI initiatives in their organizations

Page 7: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Canada

Page 8: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Greater Saskatoon Catholic Schools

Page 9: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

EAL Enrollment from 2007

Page 10: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Our Diversity

Page 11: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Our Student’s Stories

Page 12: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Goals of Interprofessional Mental Health Team •  Provide school-based mental health

supports for high school students with developmental disabilities and mental health challenges

Ø Reduce barriers to services Ø Increase capacity of school staff to support

students with a dual diagnosis Ø Implement an interprofessional approach to

provide more comprehensive mental health supports and service for students and families

Page 13: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Goals of Interprofessional Mental Health Team •  Provide an interprofessional practicum

opportunity for university students in (Nursing, Social Work, & Psychology) ü increase understanding of dual diagnosis

ü plant the seeds of advocacy for individuals with dual diagnosis in their future practice

ü increase competencies for interprofessional practice

Page 14: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Partnerships

•  Colleges of Nursing, Social Work, Educational and Clinical Psychology

•  Saskatoon Health Region •  Financial Grants from Canadian Institutes of

Health Research & the Interprofessional Health Collaborative of Saskatchewan

•  Ongoing support from GSCS

Page 15: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Meitheal •  Meitheal (Irish pronunciation: [ˈmɛhəәl]) is the Irish word for a

work team, gang, or party and denotes the co-operative labour system in rural Ireland where groups of neighbours help each other in turn with farming work, such as harvesting crops.

•  Neighbours who give their work to others are helped in turn with their own heavy seasonal tasks so the heart of the concept is community unity through cooperative work and mutually reciprocal support.

•  Meitheal is the Irish expression of the ancient and universal utilization of cooperation to social need and this is why we like the term Meitheal.

Page 16: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

School Based Mental Health

•  Schools have the best opportunity to intervene with children and adolescents with dual diagnosis. (Prout, Handbook of Positive Psychology in Schools, 2009)

•  Prout (2005) describes this as a missed opportunity to intervene with children and adolescents with a dual diagnosis.

Page 17: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Where Our Journey Began

Page 18: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Social Skill Training Groups

IBT Groups

Positive IBT Groups

Page 19: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

IBT Interactive –Behavioral Therapy Action Process In Group Work: 4 Stage Modification

•  Orientation •  Warm-up and Sharing •  Enactment •  Affirmation

Page 20: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry
Page 21: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

IBT RESEARCH

•  More than a dozen studies have validated process & outcome using the IBT. Here are three studies focused on:

1.  Interaction 2.  Therapeutic Factors 3.  Global Assessment of Functioning

Page 22: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Reliability Ratings on Therapeutic Factors (Part of a Study by Ellen Keller, PsyD.)

1. Acceptance/cohesion .86 2. Universality .90 3. Altruism .76 4. Installation of hope .86 5.  Guidance 1.00 6.  Vicarious Learning/Modeling .45 7.  Catharsis .96 8. Imparting of information .91

Page 23: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

An IBT Outcome Study

•  Linda Daniels, PSY.D. (J. of Psychotherapy Practice & Research 1998; 7:167-176)

•  IBT Treatment Vs.

•  Waiting List (20 subjects each)

•  16 sessions (50 minutes each)

Global Assessment of Functioning

TREATMENT Mean SD 43.88 (pre) 10.9 50.83 (post) 11.6 WAIT LIST Mean SD 43.94 (pre) 8.58 45.13 (post) 9.36

Page 24: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Canadian Positive Psychology Association (CPPA) Positive Psychology is the scientific study of what enables individuals and communities to thrive. Inaugural Conference July 20 and 21, 2012

Page 25: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Positive Psychology 101 Our Partners:

Page 26: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Canada

Page 27: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

The Saskatchewan Model

Page 28: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Flourish by Dr. Martin Seligman

“In a nine-day course, we first taught the teachers to use the skills in their own lives – personally and professionally – and then we gave examples and detailed curricula of how to teach them to children.” (Seligman, 2011)

Page 29: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Positive Psychology: Telling the Story for the First Time

Page 30: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry
Page 31: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Positivity Ratio

Page 32: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry
Page 33: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Positive Psychology

•  Choice •  Change •  Cultivate •  Create

Page 34: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Wrong to Strong

Page 35: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Some Key Outcomes of Positive Psychology 101 •  Partnerships initiated founded on

positive psychology principles (Saskatoon Health Region)

•  Research Opportunities ( U of S & U of R) •  Increased positive psychology training

opportunities for school division staff •  Continued collaboration with CPPA

Page 36: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Key Outcomes of Positive Psychology 101 •  Formation of Positive Psychology

Saskatchewan •  Positive Psychology Keynote at STA

Convention – 3000 teachers •  Positive Psychology 101 makes debut in

Regina Fall 2013 •  Appreciative Inquiry Summit – Building

Connections for Newcomer Success – 180 participants

Page 37: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Positive Psychology Benefits Students

Page 38: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Discover “What gives life?”

Appreciating the best of what is…

Dream “What might be?”

Brainstorming for our vision…

Design

“What should be?” Designing new models…

Destiny “How to empower, learn

and create/adjust?” Sustaining momentum …

Affirmative Topic Choice

Model the Appreciative Inquiry 4-D Process for Change

Page 39: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Dream

•  Building on the strengths that you identified previously in the Discovery Phase, identify a dream for your future or the future of your organization.

Page 40: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Jewel Net of Indra

“Indra’s Net is a web of relationships that sparkle

nourish and amplify… as does the Appreciative Inquiry approach to embracing and leading

organizational change.” (Cooperrider, et. al. 2010)

Page 41: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Appreciative Inquiry The Strengths Revolution in Management and the Leadership of Change “First we shape our structures and then our structures shape us. ” – Winston Churchill

Page 42: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Dr. David Cooperrider (2012)

•  It’s often been said that strengths perform, but how about the idea that…. strengths do more than perform, they transform.

Page 43: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Appreciative Inquiry in a Nutshell •  Appreciative Inquiry (AI) is a

collaborative search to identify and understand an organization’s strengths, its potentials, its greatest opportunities, and people’s hopes for the future.

•  AI is a philosophy, a system, and a methodology developed by Dr. David Cooperrider over 30 years ago.

Page 44: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Over 30 Published Applications Of Appreciative Inquiry

STRATEGIC  Opportunities  

ORGANIZATIONAL    CHANGE

TEAM  AND  LEADERSHIP  

DEVELOPMENT

• Strategic Planning and Visioning • Sustainable Enterprise • Customer Service • Product Development • Marketing and Branding • Mergers, Alliances and Customer Partnering • Process Improvement 3 • Whole Systems Change • Culture Change • Organizational Design • Innovation and Creativity • Diversity Programs • Cross Cultural Communications • Performance Management • Developing High Performance Teams • Collaborative Networks • Conflict Resolution • Rapid Design Events • Partnerships and Alliances • Leadership Development • Executive Coaching • Life/Career Coaching • Management Education

Page 45: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

AI Has Four Key Processes

•  Discovering – an organization or group’s current strengths

•  Involving – all members of the group in designing the organization’s ideal future

•  Redesigning – the organization to reflect the first two

•  Using – the energy generated by the AI process to make things happen

Page 46: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Appreciative Inquiry (AI)

“We have reached the end of problem solving as a mode of inquiry capable of inspiring and sustaining human system change. The future belongs to methods that affirm, compel, and accelerate learning while including the voices of all the people who will be affected by the change.”

David Cooperrider

Page 47: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Appreciative Inquiry Summit

•  18 May 7, 2013

Page 48: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

The  Appreciative  Inquiry  4-­‐‑D  Model  of  Positive  Change

Page 49: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

•  Appreciate “Best of what is” •  Imagine “What might be” •  Design “What should be” •  Create “What will be”

•  Identify problem •  Conduct root cause analysis •  Brainstorm solutions &

analyze •  Develop treatment - action

plans or interventions

(deficit based change) (strengths-focused innovation) Deficit Management Appreciative Inquiry

Problem Metaphor: Organizations are machines “problems to be solved”

Mystery Metaphor: Living systems; webs of relatedness “worlds of infinite strengths”

Page 50: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

It Is Time to Re-think Human Organization & Change Leadership

•  “The task of leadership is to create an alignment of strengths…making a system’s weaknesses irrelevant”. Peter Drucker

(Interview with David Cooperrider)

Page 51: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Outcomes from the “Building Connections for Newcomer Success Summit” •  The application of positive psychology research

and Appreciative Inquiry has allowed GSCS staff to shift their attention from a deficit focus, to building on student, staff, and organizational strengths.

•  Increased our awareness of the importance of providing opportunities to broaden our outreach to both inside and outside stakeholders when establishing or rebuilding programs.

Page 52: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

It Created a Buzz Headline in Saskatoon StarPhoenix on May 8, the day after the summit …

“Meeting the EAL Challenge”

& Global Evening

News Story

Page 53: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Other Ways We Have Applied Appreciative Inquiry •  Team meetings •  Program reviews •  Professional growth plans – Feedforward

Interview Technique •  Large-scale community consultation

through an AI Summit

Page 54: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Discover “What gives life?”

Appreciating the best of what is…

Dream “What might be?”

Brainstorming for our vision…

Design

“What should be?” Designing new models…

Destiny “How to empower, learn

and create/adjust?” Sustaining momentum …

Affirmative Topic Choice

Model the Appreciative Inquiry 4-D Process for Change

Page 55: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Design

•  Building on your strengths, and keeping your dream(s) in mind, what could you design in your personal/professional life or for your organization?

Page 56: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

In Conclusion

Like all good stories, we end where we began. “Happily ever after” is traditionally

the ending of a fictional story. But in positive psychology, it is the beginning of

the real story, because the writing and rewriting of the narratives of our lives is

one of the most powerful means available for moving toward greater happiness.

» D. J. Tomasulo and J. O. Pawelski (2012)

Page 57: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Discover “What gives life?”

Appreciating the best of what is…

Dream “What might be?”

Brainstorming for our vision…

Design

“What should be?” Designing new models…

Destiny “How to empower, learn

and create/adjust?” Sustaining momentum …

Affirmative Topic Choice

Model the Appreciative Inquiry 4-D Process for Change

Page 58: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Personal Reflections

Our journey continues. Your journey continues as well. Please narrate your ideas and what you have learned, using the following questions as a guide… One area of insight or learning for me was . . . The high point in the presentation for me was . . . One of the most important outcomes of this workshop in my view was . . .

Page 59: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Destiny: Personal Pledges for Action •  What is one message that you will communicate

to (your colleagues, employees, family, community)?

•  The smallest things I will do that will have the largest impact include . . .

•  One big hope as I leave this workshop is . . .

Page 60: Our Journey with Positive Psychology and Appreciative Inquiry

Questions …