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Schumacher, Karin; Calvet, Claudine; Reimer, Silke
Litwin, Gloria; Salmon, Shirley
The AQR Tool – Assessment of the Quality of Relationship
Based on developmental psychology. Translated by Gloria Litwin in collaboration with Shirley Salmon. With DVD
2019
17.0 x 24.0 cm, 84 p., 7 illustrations b/w, 8 illustrations color, inkl. DVD, paperback / softback
ISBN: 9783954903887
go to ebook version
17.0 x 24.0 cm, 84 p., 7 illustrations b/w, 8 illustrations color, inkl. DVD, paperback / softback
24,95 €
ISBN: 9783954903887
go to ebook version
Short Description
The AQR-Tool for the Assessment of the Quality of Relationship in music therapy with children on the autistic spectrum was developed by music therapist Karin Schumacher and developmental psychologist Claudine Calvet. Developmental psychological knowledge, especially infant research, forms the theoretical basis.The music therapeutic work with children on the autistic spectrum led to the question of the origins of the human ability to build interpersonal relationships. The examination of the “Model of Development”, as formulated by the infant researcher D. N. Stern (Stern 2000), initially led to interpreting the clinical picture of autism from the viewpoint of infant and attachment theorists. The scales of the AQR-Tool follow the logic of development as described by Stern and focus on how the relationship to oneself (body and voice), to objects such as music instruments, and to the music therapist develops in children with pervasive developmental disorders. Another scale describes the music therapist and his/her interventions. Therefore, an AQR-assessment can answer the question whether - from a developmental psychological point of view - the therapist’s intervention is appropriate to the patient’s state of development. The AQR-Scales can help to work out appropriate interventions and aims for therapy.
Biographical Note
Karin Schumacher, Prof. Dr. rer. sc. mus. studied music therapy in Vienna and music and dance education in Salzburg. She is teaching at University of the Arts Berlin and, together with Claudine Calvet developed the AQR-Tool to assess the ability for relationships in children with autism.Claudine Calvet is a developmental psychologist. She studied at Sorbonne in Paris. Her interest in interaction analysis within families was the basis for the development of a therapeutic video intervention system (TIA) and to teach therapists how to intervene during infancy. www.claudine-calvet.eu
Silke Reimer, Dr. rer. sc. mus., is working as music therapist with adults with severe multiple disabilities. The focus of her research and teaching at the University of the Arts Berlin is developmental psychological oriented music therapy with people with autism and adults with severe multiple disabilities