About
Playlists
Sign up
18

MENTAL HEALTH PROMOTION

Join
OverviewBadgesEndorsements

MENTAL HEALTH PROMOTION

Join

Content

This Learning Playlist is part of the international training course Mental Health Promotion in the Youth Field. There are 3 parts to this training.

Before the Mobility
Participants of this international training course are requested to prepare by doing some research into the NLP that we will use as a model for our learning about Mental Health Promotion. They do this through the Learning Activities:
  • What is NLP
  • History of NLP
  • NLP and System Theory

The First Part of the Mobility
For the first 6 days of the Mobility, participants will experience youth work activities and reflect on their learning from that day using the following Learning Activities:
  1. Change the world, Change your mind
  2. Step by Step to great Rapport
  3. Sensory Acquity, Mind-reading for beginners
  4. Building the Picture, Setting the Outcomes
  5. Tools and techniques - 1
  6. Tools and techniques - 2

The Second Part of the Mobility
Participants will transfer their learning into (digital) learning activities for the people they work with and participate in a youth work market with local youth work organisations.

LifeComp competence framework
To support recognition of non-formal learning and to support the development of the “Personal, Social and Learning to Learn” skills within youth work we make in this training an connection between the learning happening during the training and the LifeComp Competence Framework.

Spcifically will be worked on the following skill zones: flexibility, growth mindset, critical thinking, collaboration, self-regulation, communication, empathy, well-being and managing learning.

Open Badges
In each Learning Activity and for the total Learning Playlist participants can earn Open Badges. Sometimes the badges will be issued via checking evidence by accredited NLP practisioners, other times via international trainers and also via self-assessment by the earners itself.

This project is co-funded by ErasmusPlus

Activities to complete

Complete the following activities, earn badges and you will see your playlist progress updated
Mental health promotion in the Youth Field
Mandatory
7 days 17 hours
View full activity

Content

As you know from Activity 1, NLP was developed in the early 1970’s in California. It developed in a historical context that is a huge influence on the way that it was used and seen in the early days. By 1975, when the first work on NLP was published, President Kennedy and his brother along with Martin Luther-King had been shot, the first Star Wars movie was in production and the Summer of Love of 1968 was just a distant, blissful memory.
UCL Campus

Richard Bandler was a post-grad student in Psychology, and he started running Gestalt Therapy workshops for groups of fellow students. John Grinder a tutor in Linguistics who attended Bandler’s workshops and saw that Bandler was getting great success with his work. Grinder realised that the reason for the success was the way that Bandler used language, and the 2 of them started to work together.
At this time there was a huge growth in “Talking Therapy” and the different schools of therapy that were developing. Most training, and therefore most therapy, was not great quality, but some therapists were outstanding. Bandler and Grinder chose 3 of these and spent many months analysing what they did, asking themselves this question “What is the difference that is making the difference in their work?”
Taking all this research on the 3 other outstanding therapists and analysing their work Bandler & Grinder discovered that the secret of their success lay in how they used language. They broke this down further and simply copied the best bits of their work, gave it a twist and called it NLP. This process of “Modelling Excellence”, in other words, copying what others do well and re-using it, is a key part of NLP.

Get activity badge

The History of NLP Get this badge

Badge informationEndorsements
NLP developed in a specific historical context in the early 1970s in California. To understand NLP fully we need to know about this historical context so that we can adapt it for our own Mental Health Promotion youth work in the early 21st Century.

This badge needs to be completed before the training starts so that you arrive with an understanding of NLP that we will build on during the training.
Tasks
Task no.1
Evidence verified by: one activity organiser
1. Please think of and list 8 other social, political, historical or cultural movements that were gaining influence in the USA at that time.
2. Find out who were the 3 Super-Therapists that Bandler and Grinder chose to model. What sort of therapy did these 3 offer?
3. In no more than 1 paragraph, please say what a Gestalt cycle is. This might help:


4. See what you can find out about Richard Bandler’s murder trial!

Skills

#Mental Health Promotion
ESCO
#campaign for youth work in the local community
LIFECOMP
#Flexibility
LIFECOMP
#Growth mindset
LIFECOMP
#Critical thinking
ESCO
#develop international cooperation strategies
ESCO
#give massages
LIFECOMP
#Collaboration
LIFECOMP
#Self-regulation
ESCO
#communicate on the youth's well-being
ESCO
#talk with the selected community
ESCO
#work in partnership with social services users
ESCO
#relaxation methods
ESCO
#seek innovation in current practices
ESCO
#check story
LIFECOMP
#Communication
LIFECOMP
#Empathy
LIFECOMP
#Wellbeing
ESCO
#promote mental health
LIFECOMP
#Managing learning
Activities: 17
Started: 55
Completed playlist: 12
Time to complete: 16 days 9 hours 15 minutes
Share:

Organisers

Network of Cities and Regions of Learning
Badgecraft hosts this platform and develops it together with leading educational organisations. The European Union's programme Erasmus+ granted co-funding for building the first version of this platform. Contact support@badgecraft.eu.
Platform
Change to another language:
Co-funded by the Erasmus+ programme of the European Union
HomeMapActivitiesPlaylists