Friendship Et Al/ Cann - Cognitive Skills Programme Flashcards

1
Q

What do cognitive skills programmes aim to do?

A

They aim to change the offenders thinking and give them better control over impulsiveness, increase their problem solving skills and improve their moral reasoning and social perspective

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2
Q

Who developed the reasoning and rehabilitation cognitive skills development programme?

A

Ross and Fabiano

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3
Q

What are some of the things that R&R programmes target the development of?

A

Thinking styles, self control and moral reasoning

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4
Q

What is the R&R programme supposed to teach offenders?

A

Skills necessary to manage a life without further criminal activity

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5
Q

How is the R&R programme delivered?

A

It is comprised of 35 sessions of 90-120 minutes in duration to be delivered to offenders in groups of six to eight offenders bi-weekly

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6
Q

What does research indicate about prison?

A

That it has a poor record in rehabilitating offenders and that many offenders become locked in the ‘revolving door’ of repeat offending and repeated custodial sentences

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7
Q

What sort of prisoners are chosen for the Reasoning and Rehabilitation programmes?

A

Those with a high IQ and basic literacy skills

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8
Q

How many subject modules are there in the R&R programmes?

A

7

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9
Q

What was the aim of Friendship et al’s study?

A

To evaluate the success of cognitive skills programmes for prisoners

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10
Q

What method was used in Friendship et al’s study?

A

Quasi experiment

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11
Q

How many groups were studied in the Friendship et al study?

A

2 - an experimental group and a control group

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12
Q

What was compared between the two groups in the Friendship et al study?

A

Re conviction rates

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13
Q

What was the sample in the Friendship et al study?

A

670 adult male offenders serving a sentence of two or more years who voluntarily participated in the cognitive skills programme between 1992 and 1996

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14
Q

What did the cognitive skills programme aim to do in Friendship et al’s study?

A

Correct faulty thinking patterns which have been linked to offending behaviour

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15
Q

How many sessions did the participants receive in the Friendship et al study?

A

20 or 36

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16
Q

What did the skills developed by the programme in the Friendship et al study help the men gain?

A

Self control, interpersonal problem solving skills, social perspective taking and understanding the rules which govern behaviour

17
Q

What was the result of the Friendship et al study?

A

There was a significant drop in reconviction rates - after two years they were up to 14% lower than the comparison group

18
Q

What were the conclusions of the Friendship et al study?

A

Cognitive skills programmes are successful in reducing reconviction rates

19
Q

What happened following the publication of the report by the Friendhsip et al study?

A

The cognitive skills programme was rolled out across the prison service in the belief that it was a cost effective way of reducing the prison population in the long term

20
Q

What did later research conducted by Falshaw and Friendship et al fail to find?

A

A significant effect between a treatment group of offenders who experienced a cognitive skills programme and their matched control group of offenders

21
Q

What was the aim of the study conducted by Cann?

A

To find out if cognitive skills programmes were effective in terms of lowering reconviction rates for a sample of women prisoners

22
Q

What was the sample used in Cann’s study?

A

180 female offenders who had started Enhanced Thinking Skills or R&R between 1996 and 2000

23
Q

What did the comparison group in Cann’s study consist of?

A

540 offenders who did not participate in these programmes

24
Q

What was calculated for all of the women in the Cann study?

A

The expected 2 year reconviction rates and the actual reconviction rates for 1 year and 2 years after release

25
Q

What were the women in the Cann study matched on?

A

Whether they were at a high, medium or low risk of conviction

26
Q

What was the result of the Cann study?

A

There was no significant difference between the groups for expected reconviction rates

27
Q

What was concluded from Cann’s study?

A

Cognitive skills training may not be an effective treatment strategy for female offenders

28
Q

What reasons did Cann give for why the cognitive skills training was not effective for women?

A

Women offend for different reasons than men, the programmes were not appropriate for the women’s needs having been developed with men’s risk factors and the programmes were not delivered consistently in the women’s prisons