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This Webcast is sponsored by the UIC National Research & Training Center on Psychiatric Disability.  The Center is supported by the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, USDOE, and the Center for Mental Health Services, SAMHSA.

Self-Determination Workshop Series Session Webcast

USING THE INTERNET TO PROMOTE SELF-DETERMINATION & EMOTIONAL WELL-BEING

Held Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2002

Register to view the webcast now on your computer

Session I - NetActivism: Leveling the Playing Field

Session II: The Electronic Career Stairway: Steps to Finding the Right Work via the Internet 

Session III: Moderated Panel Discussion

The Internet can be a useful tool for the promotion of self-determination and emotional well-being. By providing access to diverse information, the Net provides new and enhanced opportunities for increasing self-determination for people with psychiatric disabilities. It links individuals with online communities, like-minded peers, thorough mental health and health information, and tools for taking charge of their own lives. This webcast will address current trends and web-based resources in these areas, with sessions focusing particularly on community activism and employment. A moderated panel will conclude the webcast with personal stories of self-determination and a brief discussion about how one might assess the reliability of information found on the Internet.


Edward SchwartzSession I
NetActivism: Leveling the Playing Field
Presented by Edward Schwartz

"The Internet can help us strengthen democracy in America, irrespective of our views on particular issues. Going online makes it easier for us to communicate, keep track of what's happening with government and politics at all levels, and convey our concerns to people in power. Of course, the Internet can also drive us further apart, if all we seek are new ways to meet our needs entirely within our own homes without regard to one another. The technology is nothing more than energy moving through wires and machines. What it does for and to us depends on how we use it" (Schwartz, NetActivism, How Citizens Use the Internet, 1996). [For example, people with HIV/AIDS have used the Internet to gain worldwide support for their demands related to funds for research and treatment and the cost of prescription drugs. People with other physical and mental disabilities can use the Internet to achieve self-determination in this way as well.] The presenter will discuss how the Internet is helping people with limited financial resources participate in online communities that start functioning as advocacy groups. These individuals and groups can then take advantage of the Web to get information relevant to their causes, and use email to put pressure on elected officials at every level.  [Back to Top]


Howard DanskySession II
The Electronic Career Stairway: Steps to Finding the Right Work via the Internet 
Presented by Howard Dansky

This session will provide practical guidance and information on Internet sites and software resources to seek, find, and secure a job. There are more than 100 sites that post job openings and/or offer job search skills tips and career advice, and the presenter will explore the kinds of information they offer and how to get at it. Participants who are seeking work, as well as practitioners providing services to support job seekers, will learn to identify, access, and use sites and tools instrumental in setting and achieving work-related goals. Session content will cover resources that facilitate all phases of the job search: self-assessment of interests, skills, knowledge, and abilities, as well as support/accommodation needs; creating "self-marketing tools" like resumes and letters; finding where the jobs are - in which the Internet, as a networking tool and constantly updating information source, is a uniquely helpful ally; and sharpening self-presentation/interview skills to compete for and secure the job one has found.  [Back to Top]


Session III
Moderated Panel Discussion
Panelists: Sylvia Caras, Howard Dansky, Frances Priester, Ed Schwartz Moderator: Judith A. Cook 

Panelists will respond to questions about how to determine the validity and reliability of information provided on the Internet, and will share personal stories about how the Internet has fostered their own self-determination.  [Back to Top]

For more information, please contact the MHSRP/UIC NRTC Web Team (webcast@psych.uic.edu)

Register Now!

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