Value Proposition canvas- Customer needs and pains
Roepke resilience panel presentation at g4 h
1. After Things Fall Apart
What Science Says About
Resilience, Recovery, and Growth
Ann Marie Roepke
University of Pennsylvania
aroepke@sas.upenn.edu
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
13. Positive Clinical
Psychology Psychology
You are here
June 2012 www.gamesforhealth.org
14. Key Concepts
Growth
Resilience
Recovery
functioning
time
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
15. Post-traumatic growth (PTG) =
positive psychological changes that
can result from struggling with
adversity.
PTG ≠ the opposite of distress. Growth
and distress can co-exist.
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
16. Resilience = a set of processes that
enables good outcomes in spite of
serious threats
(Masten, 2001)
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
17. Invulnerable Children
(Resilience 1.0)
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
18. “Ordinary Magic”
• Everyone has the potential to experience
greater resilience.
• Most people are pretty resilient already.
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
19. What Predicts Resilience?
• Emotional regulation
• Causal analysis
• Self-efficacy
• Realistic optimism
• Interpersonal skills
• Flexibility
• Sense of meaning
• Social support
• Active coping & problem-solving
(Reivich, Seligman, & McBride, 2011)
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
20. What Predicts Growth?
acceptance (.20)
positive reappraisal (.38)
religious coping (.38)
optimism (.27)
social support (.26)
religiosity (.17)
spirituality (.23)
denial (.16)
perceived threat (.14)
(Helgeson et al., 2010)
(Prati & Pietrantoni, 2009)
(effect sizes, r, in parentheses)
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
21. What Do Games Have to Do With It?
• Building
• Connecting
• Engaging
• …and doing so on a massive scale
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
22. Where do we go from here?
• Test games (to what standard?)
• Team up (how?)
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
23. Empirically Supported Treatments
(in clinical psychology)
• Tested in two (independent) randomized
controlled trials
• The intervention works better than the control
(or works as well as the established practice)
• Trials include (a) a manual/protocol; (b) an
appropriate population; (c) reliable, valid
outcome measures; (d) the right stats
More details available in Chambless & Hollon, 1998
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
24. Teaming up
Awesome
design
Big-impact
GAMES
FOR
HEALTH
Awesome
science
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
25. Thank You!
Ann Marie Roepke
University of Pennsylvania
aroepke@sas.upenn.edu
www.annmarieroepke.com
Coming soon:
www.growthinitiative.com
June 12-1, 2013 November 5-6, 2012
Boston, MA www.gamesforhealtheurope.org
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
26. Our Panel
Jane McGonigal
Layton McCurdy
Ben Sawyer
Ann Marie (Annie) Roepke
June 12-1, 2013 November 5-6, 2012
Boston, MA www.gamesforhealtheurope.org
June 2012 Games for Health Conference www.gamesforhealth.org
Hinweis der Redaktion
I’ve spent more time in prison than most of you in this room have. Luckily, the guards always let me out at the end of the day. I wasn’t doing time, but rather I was spending time in prison trying to help people prepare for turning life around once they got out. Most of my work was actually done in halfway houses, where I tried to help people achieve their goals and keep from going back behind bars. I like to think that at least a few of my clients learned something from me. I can say with confidence that I learned from them. Your first reaction might be to think that if someone has landed themselves in prison, they probably don’t have life all figured out, and they’re probably not someone who you would want to emulate. In fact, most people probably think that the most we can learn from someone in prison is a cautionary tale about what NOT to do in life. But truly, some of the people I met I halfway houses were among the most strong, determined, thoughtful, and inspiring people I know. Most people who end up in prison have faced most obstacles before the age of 12 than I’ll ever face in my lifetime. And while some of these people were seemingly crushed by these experiences, others rebounded after prison and were able to support and inspire others in a similar journey.