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'I was just thinking': Cognitive self-reports and engagement with feelings-talk in child mental health assessments

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posted on 2020-10-27, 16:09 authored by Ian Hutchby, Michelle O'Reilly, Alison Drewett, Victoria Lee
Based on a corpus of child mental health assessment meetings, this article explores how practitioners use reports on their own cognitive processing, such as I was just thinking or I'm just wondering, in interaction with children and adolescents presenting with potential mental health issues. Using the methods of conversation analysis, the findings reveal different ways in which this device is used to encourage the child to engage with a particular topic, interpretation, or version of events from the standpoint of subjective experience; in other words, to produce feelings-talk. The analysis contributes further towards the understanding of child-adult interaction in professional arenas of action: in this case child mental health assessments.

History

Citation

Research on Children and Social Interaction, 4(2), 145–167. https://doi.org/10.1558/rcsi.17650

Author affiliation

School of Media, Communication and Sociology

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Research on Children and Social Interaction

Volume

4

Issue

2

Pagination

145-167

Publisher

Equinox Publishing

issn

2057-5807

Acceptance date

2020-08-01

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2023-02-16

Language

en

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