Aspen Achievement Academy
This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2022) |
Aspen Achievement Academy was a wilderness therapy program for adolescents, based in Loa, Utah.
It was operated as a part of Aspen Education Group.
The program has been moved, in name only, and merged with another wilderness therapy program in Utah - Outback Therapeutic Expeditions - in March 2011.[1]
According to the program's promotional materials, Aspen Achievement Academy enrolled adolescent males and females, ages 13–17, with a history of moderate to severe emotional and behavioral problems, such as low self-esteem,
The program's website state that the program was
In news media and popular culture
Aspen Achievement Academy has been a subject of several media reports and works of popular culture:
- The 1999 book Shouting at the Sky: Troubled Teens and the Promise of the Wild by ISBN 0-312-20008-0recounts the author's experiences and observations during several months he spent in the wilderness with teens at Aspen Achievement Academy.
- The third season of the UK
- In January 1996, six teenagers ran away from an Aspen group. They were found by law enforcement officials and returned to the program, but the incident raised concerns that future escapees might assault tourists, hikers or recreationists on the public lands that Aspen used. Afterward, the Bureau of Land Management, which manages these lands, was reported to have conducted a review to determine whether to renew or terminate Aspen's access permit.[3]
- In April 2007 a 16-year-old male student died after hanging himself with a piece of seatbelt webbing.[4]
History
Aspen Achievement Academy (AAA) was founded in 1988 by Doug Nelson, Dr. Keith Hooker, Doug Cloward, and Madolyn Liebing, Ph.D. It was originally named Wilderness Academy. AAA is known for being the first wilderness therapy programs to have a clinician (Liebing) who provided individual therapy. AAA was also the first Utah State licensed wilderness therapy program.
References
- ^ "Utah wilderness, youth therapy programs closing". The Salt Lake Tribune.
- ^ Potter, Cherry (22 February 2006). "Cherry Potter: Train them like rats". the Guardian. Retrieved 26 January 2023.
- ^ Christopher Smith, Tough love proves too tough High Country News, June 10, 1996
- ^ Four recent Utah deaths in treatment programs Archived October 17, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, By Kirsten Stewart, The Salt Lake Tribune, October 13, 2007
- White, W. (2012) Chapter 2: “A History of Adventure Therapy” in Adventure Therapy: Theory, Practice, and Research by Gass, M, Gillis, L. Russell, K. Routledge/Bruner-Mazel Press.