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Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

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Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model. Contents. Introduction. Project Background. Research. Partnerships. Outputs: Present and Future. Introduction. Opportunities for Employment Inc… A private not-for-profit employment assistance services agency - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

MotivatingChange Towards Employment

Using the Stages of Change Model

Page 2: Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

Outputs: Present and Future

Partnerships

Research

Project Background

Introduction

Contents

Page 3: Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

Opportunities for Employment Inc…

• A private not-for-profit employment assistance services agency

• 98% government funded

• Incorporated in 1996

• 37 staff in two locations in Winnipeg

• Have assisted over 6,000 people find meaningful employment in the last 12 years

• 2300/year come through intake

Introduction

Page 4: Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

Opportunities for Employment Inc…

• Provides services to unemployed Winnipeg residents.

• Our services include employment consultation, skill development and life skills training.

• Specializes in serving marginalized, unemployed, low income people with multiple barriers to employment.

Introduction

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The Need:

Project Background

• A disconnect exists between the actual need and the service offered, this is very demoralizing and discouraging

for participants and staff.

• Organizations that assist unemployed low-income individuals prepare for, find and keep meaningful employment, experience:

• High program drop out rates of 25%-50% after first contact

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Project BackgroundThe Need:

• Identified a need to address motivation prior to engaging individuals in job search activities.

• Immediate engagement in employment assistance services, results in an ineffective use of resources and high program attrition rates.

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Employment Service Providers must:

• Develop new ways to assist clients with multiple barriers to employment.

• Address the client’s readiness for change.

• Work with people where they are at.

Project Background

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• Explore new and creative untested approaches.

• Maximize the labour market participation of the currently underemployed or under-represented groups through the removal of barriers.

Research Priorities:

Project Background

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Opportunities for Employment Inc. (OFE)has conducted 22 months of research within

a three-year study (Feb 2007 – Jan 2010) using Stages of Change Model

and Motivational Interviewing

Funding for the Stages of Change Research Study is provided by: The Government of CanadaThe Manitoba Government

Project Background

Page 10: Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

This study uses a previously untested approach to increase the labour market participation of those currently underemployed or unemployed by addressing motivation and readiness to change.

This research project also focuses on addressing and removing barriers to employment faced by individuals receiving income assistance and other under-represented labour market groups.

Project Background

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Test Question:

“As compared to a control group, how does the application of Transtheoretical Model of Change and Motivational Interviewing to employment development, impact participants’ (study group) movement within the Stages of Change; will it result in…

• decreased program attrition,

• increased employment rates, and

• increased employment retention rates?”

Project Background

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Primary Participant Demographic:

• Chronically unemployed

• Clients of First Nation, Métis, Inuit, or non-status descent (58%)

• Single Parents (mostly women)

• Clients with significant and multiple barriers to employment

• Persons with disabilities

• Ex-offenders

• Newcomers to Canada

• Youth (18-29 years of age)

Project Background

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Participant Assignment:

Participants volunteering to take part in the research study were randomly assigned to either a study group or control group.

During the course of the research project, over 2,400 individuals will take part in this exciting opportunity.

Project Background

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SOC Model

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SOC Model

Page 16: Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

SOC Model

Page 17: Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

SOC Model

Page 18: Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

SOC Model

Page 19: Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

SOC Model

Page 20: Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

SOC Model

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SOC Model

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Recycling

• An important concept that underlies this understanding of change is the acceptance that people rarely start at one point and progress through the Stages of Change without interruption.

• Such interruptions or setbacks are referred to as Recycling…

• And viewed as normal and not viewed as failure.

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• Individuals may be identified as Recycling by behaviours such as:

• Poor attendance

• Missed appointments

• or perhaps a change in the level of job search activity

Recycling

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Activity

• Let’s get moving…

It’s your turn!

Page 25: Motivating Change Towards Employment Using the Stages of Change Model

“You know, I’ve lost two uncles to lung cancer, and now I’ve lost my dad. I have got to quit. I’ve been reading some information on the Patch. This pack of cigarettes is my last pack, them I’m done.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“I can’t believe how much weight I have lost! I’ve been on this diet for almost a month and I’m up to three days a week at this gym. I’m really getting into this!”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“Jumping through hoops is not going to make any difference in my life. I know what I need to do, and I’ll do it when I’m good and ready.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“I guess those are some things I haven’t thought about before. I’m not saying I agree with you, or that I am going to enter treatment, but I’ll think about what you said.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“There is no way I am taking that medication. I know what kind of crap that does to your head. There is nothing you can do to help me or fix me.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“Are you kidding me? It’s been a year since I’ve started counseling? I guess I have been leading my AA group for over a year, too. I’ve felt so good and life has been going so well that I haven’t seriously even considered drinking for a long time.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“Well, I was discharged 10 days ago. I have been taking my meds ever since, and I have made it to both of my counseling appointments.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“I am going to do it. I am going to start working out if it kills me. I’ve called 24-Hour fitness, I’ve figured out the times of the week I can workout, and now I’m just looking for a workout partner.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“I’ve dropped those twenty pounds I wanted to! I’m still walking every night after dinner, I’m great at counting calories, and I let myself cheat two meals a week. This has been a great year.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“Will this really help me get my kids back? I really can’t take the time off work for inpatient treatment, but I’ll consider it if it will help me get my kids. Are there any other options that would help?”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“Our foster daughter gets discharged next Thursday. We have met with her teachers, put an alarm on her door, and we have respite set up on weekends. I think we are ready to try this foster parenting thing with her again.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“All I hear about are those horrible side effects. I will quit taking that medication if I have those crazy things happen to me. Do you really think it will help?”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“Marijuana should be legal anyway. Everybody smokes it and I just sell enough to make a little spending money. It’s not like I’m some addict or some major drug dealer.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“My son has been home for six months now, and I feel really good. Those Motivational Interviewing classes really helped my parenting. I just got my one year coin in AA and I’m co-leading a meeting with my sponsor. It’s hard to believe, but I actually like going to work now.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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“I hate it, but I’m not talking with my old friends. I don’t like those AA meetings either. I haven’t smoked weed or drank in almost two months. At least some of my memory is coming back.”

A. Pre-contemplationB. ContemplationC. PreparationD. ActionE. Maintenance

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During a one-on-one intake process, an assessment is done with the participant.

The tool we use is a modified version of the University of Rhode Island Change Assessment scale (URICA), there are 12 questions asked using a 5pt Likert scale.

Participants are then referred to an intervention based on the readiness to change score.

Assessment Tool

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Stage Indicators:

Each stage has identifiable indicators based on behaviours or attitudes.

SOC Model

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Pre-Contemplation:

• Not thinking about getting a job• Doesn’t see a benefit to working in relation to earning

an income• Working isn’t relevant• Feeling defensive towards those that intervene• Uninformed or under informed about consequences of

not working• Usually referred by others• See others as having a problem• May feel demoralized

Stage 1

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Contemplation:

• Thinking about working (but feel ambivalent)• Working may be relevant• May see some benefit from obtaining employment• Needs help to figure out what having a job would mean

for them• May experience a feeling of being “stuck”• Experiences fear of failure and fear of the unknown• May begin to speak of perceived barriers to

employment

Stage 2

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Contemplation:

• May be eager to talk in order to explore and fully understand their present state

• High levels of anxiety• Low self-efficacy• Willing to weigh the pros and cons of change in order

to make a decision• May start to think more of the future than the past

Stage 2

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Pre-Contemplation and Contemplation:Workshop One

• This three-hour workshop is designed for participants who are identified, as not be being “ready, willing and able” to obtain and sustain employment.

• Participants will be introduced to the concept of the six Stages of Change.

• Using a decisional balance exercise, participants will explore, as part of a group, the advantages and disadvantages of being employed and unemployed.

Orientation

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Pre-Contemplation and Contemplation:Work Readiness Orientation One

• Other activities used is emotional arousal (videos), consciousness raising (to increase one awareness of self and the need to change), and self revaluation (to examine one’s own attitudes and behaviours)

• The workshop focuses on feelings of ambivalence and what it feels like to feel two ways about working.

• Assessment is done at the end of the workshop, the result of the assessment will determine what intervention the participant will go to next.

Orientation

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Pre-Contemplation and Contemplation: Workshop Two

• Participants will engage in this three-hour workshop based on referral according to their self-assessment score obtained at the end of Workshop One.

• This workshop further explores feelings of ambivalence that are common in the Stages of Change cycle.

Orientation

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Pre-Contemplation and Contemplation: Workshop Two

• This session expands on the concepts of emotions, stress, self-efficacy, and the importance of self-confidence as related to change and to employment.

• It also includes a SOC self-assessment.

Orientation

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Preparation: Workshop Three

• This three-hour workshop reviews and builds on the SOC concepts introduced previously, for those that attended Workshops 1 & 2, and introduces them for the first time for those that come to intake in Preparation

• Focuses on reinforcing the decision made to move towards engagement in the labour force.

• SOC concepts utilized in this workshop include helping relationships, countering, and commitment.

Orientation

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Pre-Contemplation and Contemplation:Motivational Interviews

• Motivational Interviewing (MI), developed by Miller and Rollnick (1991), is defined as a client-centered, directive counselling method for enhancing intrinsic motivation to change by exploring and resolving ambivalence.

• It focuses on the person’s current interests and concerns and it is consciously directive in that the interviewer elicits and selectively reinforces change talk and also responds to resistance in a manner intended to extinguish it.

Psycho-Therapy

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Pre-Contemplation and Contemplation:

Motivational Interviews

• Motivational Interviews are designed to focus on a participant’s employment situation and the identified stage of the SOC Model the individual is currently in.

• The interviewer uses empathy, open-ended questions, reflections and affirmations.

• The interview is concluded with a summary of the discussion focusing on the individual’s strengths.

Psycho-Therapy

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Pre-Contemplation and Contemplation:

Motivational Interviews

• The goal is to elicit change by the participant from talking about the benefits of employment and subsequently have the participant formulate an action plan towards employment.

• Motivational Interviews are offered on a one-on-one basis and will generally last one hour.

• An assessment will be performed at the end of each session to determine if additional sessions are required.

Psycho-Therapy

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Follow-up:

• During the “Preparation / Action” stages, the need for continued support is critical. The action stage is often when a person loses their cheerleaders.

• OFE provides follow-up services for six months.

SOC Model

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Follow-up:

If the participant recycles, they have access to the following…

• Access to MI appointments with the clinician

• Access to workshops

• Re-assessment in conjunction with follow-up interventions

Support

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Overall Demographics & Results

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1%

2%

27% 1%

59%

5%

5%

Aboriginal African Asian South AsianEuropean Latin-American Middle Eastern

Overall Demographics & Results

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7%

58%

1%26%

8%

Inuit Metis Non-status Status-Off Reserve Status-On Reserve

Overall Demographics & Results

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1%

6%9%

56%

14%

14%

Single Common-law Married Divorced Separated Widowed

Overall Demographics & Results

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58%

42%

Have No Children Parent/Guardian

Overall Demographics & Results

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51%

49%

Male Female

Overall Demographics & Results

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67%

33%

Not a Victim of Domestic Violence Victim of Domestic Violence

Overall Demographics & Results

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63%

37%

Other Family Members NOT on Social AssistanceOther Family Members on Social Assistance

Overall Demographics & Results

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83%

17%

Believe They Have No Substance Use Barrier to EmploymentBelieve Their Substance Use is a Barrier to Employment

Overall Demographics & Results

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0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

EAS Releases

Control

Study

Released in the SOC Group: 40.7%Released in the Control Group: 51.0%Statistical Significance: .002

Overall Demographics & Results

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0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Employment

Control

Study

Employed in the SOC Group: 58.8%Employed in the Control Group: 47.3%Statistical Significance: .001

Overall Demographics & Results

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0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Employed Six Months

Control

Study

Overall Demographics & Results

Employed 6-M’s in the SOC Group: 39.1%Employed 6-M’s in the Control Group: 27.3%Statistical Significance: .00018

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Outputs (future):

• Lessons learned / Best Practices document

• Annual external evaluator report

• Knowledge Transfer Presentations

• Information Dissemination (website)

• Summary Evaluation Report (end of 3 years)

Outputs

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“When I came to OFE as a participant, I was terrified about going back to work after a lengthy illness. There were many things that I had to deal with and the pressures were weighing down on me.

The Stages of Change workshops and one-on-one Motivational Interviews helped me to explore my feelings about returning to work and I began to challenge some of my perceptions about what working would look like for me and for my children.  

Through continued support, I made the decision to work and moved into updating my skills and looking for employment. 

I don’t think that I would have made it through my computer training and job search preparation had it not been for the support available through the Stages of Change project.  

I have been working full-time for over six months now and am enjoying the rewards of being a part of the work world. Thank you!”

Cassandra

 

Testimonials

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Corrine: “attending the workshops gave me the support I needed in a non-judgmental way”

Preethiranga: (male newcomer/EAL) “the workshop gave me the start I needed... and now I'm in training, it was wonderful”

Testimonials

Dawn: “The one-to-one meetings made me feel that I was really cared for..I felt nurtured and guided”

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Partnerships

Goals/Objectives:

• Provide a cost effective program that will assist individuals to achieve full-time, long-term employment each year.

• Design strategies and programming to continually increase the retention rate of participants at each of the major program stages, from application to sustained employment.

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Partnerships

• The evaluation results of this research study will be widely disseminated, by means of a Transtheoretical Model of Change with Motivational Interviewing manual or website, presentations to employment development practitioners and relevant government departments to support the sharing of best practices and knowledge transfer.

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PartnershipsEmployment Manitoba Steering Committee Member Responsibilities:

• Help assess, guide and evaluate the project, and recommendations for program development• Represent the interests of the Provincial Government• Participate in quarterly meetings• Serve as a resource to the Steering Committee• Make recommendations for the research project• Support outreach efforts to raise awareness of the SOC project• Provide comments on desired outcome input on Best Practices

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Steering Committee Representatives from:

• Community & Youth Corrections Adult Probation Service Manitoba Justice

• Employment Manitoba Manitoba Competitiveness, Training & Trade

• Disability Programs & Employment & Income Assistance Manitoba Family Services and Housing

• Manitoba Family Conciliation, Community Service Delivery

Partnerships

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Steering Committee Representatives from:

• Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP)

• Addictions Foundation of Manitoba

• Selkirk Mental Health Center

• Rehabilitation and Recovery Services

• William and Catherine Booth College

• Restorative Resolutions, Probation

Partnerships

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Steering Committee Representatives from:

• Urban Circle Training Centre

• Manitoba Food Processors Association

• Reconnaissance Management Consulting Group

• Canadian Mental Health Association

Partnerships

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Enhance the model to further meet the specific needs of specific people groups and provide a menu of options for:

• At risk youth

• Newcomers

• First Nations Peoples

• Ex-offenders

• Individuals without financial supports

Vision

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Vision

• Assisting other Canadian service providers in developing strategies to apply the model

• Seeing national gains in program retention,employment and job retention rates

• Increasing the labour market participation of under-represented groups across Canada

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Questions?