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RPG as Therapeutic Recreation for People with Disabilities - Relevant Notes - Part 1
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by
Hawke Robinson
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published
Jun 20, 2015
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last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
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filed under:
recreation therapy,
Disabilities,
Role-Playing Gaming Therapeutic Recreation Handbook of Practice,
blog,
blog posting,
recreational therapy,
therapeutic recreation
Based on The Recreational Therapy Handbook of Practice, and WHO ICF (World Health Organization) (International Classification of Functioning). This will be edited periodically, and is only in a notes format for now. It is hoped to turn this into a more comprehensive document at a later date.
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RPG Handbook Wiki Original Source Document
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by
Hawke Robinson
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published
Nov 09, 2016
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last modified
Dec 08, 2022 02:57 PM
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filed under:
Discipline: RPGT (Role-Playing Game Therapy),
Handbook of Practice,
Discipline: TR/RT
Here is the source document that is being converted to the wiki version of the RPG Handbook of Practice.
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Archives
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…
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RPG Handbook
/
Wiki Version
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RPG Recreation Therapy Hypothetical Scenario - Bipolar Clients in Complex Interpersonal Interactions
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by
Hawke Robinson
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published
Jun 20, 2015
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last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
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filed under:
Disabilities,
therapeutic rpg,
research,
blog,
bipolar,
rpg for therapy,
blog posting
As we continue through the course on Recreation Therapy for People with Disabilities at Eastern Washington University, we have various assignments to write up hypothetical scenarios with hypothetical clients. This is one with several types of scenarios with hypothetical bipolar clients using tabletop role-playing gaming as the core activity. This is a high level overview, rather than a detailed activity analysis.
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The Personality of Fantasy Game Players
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by
Hawke Robinson
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published
Apr 29, 2017
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last modified
Dec 08, 2022 03:00 PM
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filed under:
archived article,
Full Text,
Child Abuse,
Assault / Abuse,
Potential RPG Research Question,
correlative research,
Discipline: Psychology,
2 - Pending Request For Public Permission,
Others' research,
Peer Reviewed,
Personality
Neil A. Douse & Ian Chris McManus (1993). The Personality of Fantasy Game Players. British Journal of Psychology, 84 (4), 505-509.
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…
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Additional Reference Material
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To Be Sorted
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Update correlative and meta-research information regarding role-playing gamers
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by
Hawke Robinson
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published
Jun 20, 2015
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last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
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filed under:
blog,
blog posting,
RPG Research Goal
Most of the existing research on role-playing gamers is dated from the 1980's and early 1990's. As an initial significant first step for the RPG Research Project, bring the correlative and meta-analysis data up to date.
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Updated list of goals for the RPG Research Project
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by
Hawke Robinson
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published
Jun 20, 2015
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last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
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filed under:
blog,
blog posting,
RPG Research Goal,
RPG Research Project Updates
Recently updated the main page's list of goals. Over the next few weeks, I will elaborate on the details of each of those goals. Here is the overview list:
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Vision of the future
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by
Hawke Robinson
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published
Jun 20, 2015
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last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
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filed under:
Potential RPG Research Question,
RPG Research Goal,
blog,
blog posting,
RPG Research Project Updates
It is still far to early to be sure that this vision for the future will even be relevant several years from now, as the research data begins to roll in, but if any of the core assumptions hold even remotely true, then the long term goal of creating RPG therapy modules could become a reality.
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What is Question/Hypothesis of the RPG Research Observation Group 1?
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by
Hawke Robinson
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published
Jun 20, 2015
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last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
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filed under:
Potential RPG Research Question,
research,
blog,
blog posting,
RPG Research Project Updates
I had a recent question on Facebook about my posting: "Finished session 5 with RPG Preliminary Observation group 1, using Ea d20 RPG in a Tolkien Middle-earth setting." The question was from Sarah Lynne Bowman, author of The Functions of Role-playing Games: How Participants Create Community, Solve Problems and Explore Identity. She asked: "What's the research question/hypothesis?"
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Why The Popular Negative Stereotypes About Role-playing Gamers Are Important to Address
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by
Hawke Robinson
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published
Jun 20, 2015
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last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
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filed under:
blog,
Anti-rpg,
blog posting,
research
Here is an example of how pervasive the inculcation of misinformation and myths of negative stereotypes about role-playing gamers has become in the united states.
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Wizards of the Coast D&D Dragon Talk Broadcast Notes
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by
Hawke Robinson
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published
Jun 20, 2015
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last modified
Feb 05, 2023 12:22 PM
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filed under:
RPG Therapeutics LLC,
Discipline: RPGT (Role-Playing Game Therapy),
recreation therapy,
correlative research,
Brain Injury (Stroke, TBI, etc.),
video,
RPG Format: Tabletop,
blog posting,
RPG Textbook,
Effects of RPG,
The RPG Research Podcast / Vidcast,
Drum Circle,
News,
interview / media mention,
suicide / suicidal,
pdd / asd / autism spectrum,
Violence,
therapeutic rpg,
RPG Format: Computer-based,
broadcast,
Anti-rpg,
rpg for therapy,
hawke robinson,
RPG Research Interview,
Drum, drums, drumming, drum circle, drum circle facilitation,
RPG Format: Live-action,
rpg for education,
recreational therapy
Here are notes from the January 22nd, 2018 interview broadcast at Wizards of the Coast's Dungeons & Dragons, "Dragon Talk" with Greg Tito and Shelly Mazzanoble, interviewing John Welker & Hawke Robinson of RPG Research, Spokane Area Gaming Alliance, & RPG Therapeutics LLC, about role-playing game education, therapy, and more. Currently a work in progress. I am working on it each day in small snippets of time while juggling everything else. I will let folks know when it is ready for sharing.
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