Family Therapy Final
Terms
undefined, object
copy deck
- delineations
- parental acts and statements that express the parents image of their children; may be objective or distorted
- Strategic Core Problem Dynamic
- More of the same solutions
- Who came up with internal family systems therapy?
- Schwartz
- Cognitive- Behavioral Core Problem Dynamic
- Inadventent reinforcement, Aversive control
- What is the concept of experiential theory?
- 1. battle for structure and initiative 2. use of craziness 3. creativity 4. communication 5. self worth 6. intergenerational theme
- what is narcissism
- self regard, object relation term
- what is the theory of dysfunction in experiential therapy
- 1. scapegost--> anxiety relief, rigid rule and communication, intolerance of indifferences, symptoms =nonverbal messages
- Narrative Core Problem Dynamic
- Problem-saturated stories
- what does SORKC stand for
- S= stimulus, O= state of Organism, R= tareget Response, KC= nature and Contingency of consequences
- operant conditioning
- A form of learning whereby a person or animal is rewarded for performing certain behaviors; the major approach in most forms of behavior therapy.
- What is contextual therapy and by whom?
- appreciation of relational ethics, invisible loyalties, by Nagy
- Psychodynamic Core Problem Dynamic
- Conflict, Projection identification, Fixation and regression
- Restraining
- overcome resistance by suggesting that family not change
- What are the major assumptions of the Milan Group?
- They read and followed many of the works of MRI and Haley and Madanes, worked with power struggles and boundaries as well, and focused on long time spans spanning even multiple generations. They worked mostly with anorexic and schizophrenic families.
- Strategic Key Techniques
- Reframing, Directives
- Mystification
- Laing's concept that many families distort their children's experience by denying or relabeling
- symbiosis
- the term Mahler used for transference
- enmeshment
- Minuchin's term for loss of autonomy due to a blurring of psychological boundaries
- what is family myth
- an experiential term, a set of beliefs based on a distortion of historical reality and shared by all family members that help shape the rules govering family functioning
- what is mystification
- an experiential term coined by Laing, families distort their children's experience by denying or relabeling it
- deconstruction
- A postmodern approach to exploring meaning by taking apart and examining taken-for-granted categories and assumptions, making possible newer and more sound constructions of meaning.
- Strategic Founders
- Don Jackson, Jay Haley
- shaping
- Reinforcing change in small steps.
- aversive control
- Using punishment and criticism to eliminate undesirable responses; commonly used in dysfunctional families.
- cognitive construction or core belief with which people structure their experience
- schema
- structural therapy focus on -------&-------and work on ---- and is -----
- present, some past, process, triadic
- complainant
- de Shazer's term for a client who describes a complaint but is at present unwilling to work on solving it.
- what is the central tenets of behavioral therapy
- behavior is maintained by its consequences
- a person related to not as a separate individual but as an extension of the self
- self object by Kohut
- what is countertransference
- emotional reactivity on the part of the therapist
- Prescribing the symptom
- a paradoxical technique that forces patient either to give up symptom or to admit that it is under voluntary control
- Cognitive-Behavioral Founders
- Gerald Patterson, Robert Liberman, Richard Stuart
- enactment
- an interaction stimulated in structural family therapy to observe and then change transactions that make up family structure
- the term Nagy used for transference
- merging
- Feedback loops
- return of portion of output of a system, especially when used to maintain output within predetermined limits (negative feedback) or to signal a need to modify system (positive feedback)
- social constructionism
- Like constructivism, it challenges the notion of an objective basis for knowledge. Knowledge and meaning are shaped by culturally shared assumptions.
- extinction
- Eliminating behavior by not reinforcing it.
- subsystem
- Smaller units in families, determined by generations, sex, or function
- a defense mechanism whereby unwanted aspects of the self are attributed to another person and that person is induced to behave in accordence with these projected attributes
- projective identification, object relation term
- Cognitive-Behavioral Key Techniques
- Functional analysis, Teaching positive control
- partial arrest of attachment or mode of behavior from an early stage of development
- fixation, object relation term
- Existential Encounter
- A relationship based on direct personal contact, rather than artificial professional roles
- triangle
- A three-person system; according to Bowen, the smallest stable unit of human relations.
- social constructionism
- Like constructivism, challenges the notion of an objective basis for knowledge. Knowledge and meaning are shaped by culturally shared assumptions.
- systematic desensitization
- Gradual exposure to feared situations paired with relaxation.
- what is the term Klien used for transference
- projective identification
- Double bind
- A conflict is created when a person receives contradictory messages on different levels of abstraction in important relationship and can't leave or comment.
- Identified patient
- symptom bearer/official patient
- Family drawing
- An experiential therapy technique whereby family members are asked to draw their ideas about how the family is organized
- traumatic occurrences that damage the bond between partners and, if not resolved, maintaine negative cycles and attachment insecuritites
- attachment injuries, experiential term
- Paradoxical intervention
- The therapist directs family members to continue their symptomatic behavior. If they conform they admit control and expose secondary gain, and if they rebel, they give up their symptoms.
- Family therapists have "turned against" strategic therapy because...
- its strategies provoked or manipulated families to change with or without their cooperation.
- General systems theory
- a biological model of living systems as whole entities that maintain themselves through continuous input/output from environment
- what is the theory of dysfunction in object relations theory
- projection of early repressed internal objects on to others
- The intellectual birthplace of family therapy and strategic therapy:
- the Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto
- mirroring
- Kohut's term for the expression of understanding and appreciation - not praise but appreciation of what the other is feeling
- constructivism
- A relativistic point of view that emphasizes the subjective construction of reality. It implies that what we see in families may be based as much on our preconceptions as on what's actually going on.
- Who are influential theorists in experiential theory?
- Whitaker, Warkentin, Felder, Malone, Satir, Schwartz, Johnson and Greenberg
- role rehearsal
- The use of role-playing, especially in couples therapy.
- using high probability behavior(preferred activities) to reinforce low probability behavior (non-preferred activities)
- a CBT technique, Premack priciple
- what is mirroring and by who
- expression of understanding and appreciation not praise but appreciation of what the other is feeling. needed for secure attachment, by Kohut
- family of origin
- A person's parents and siblings; usually refers to the original nuclear family of an adult.
- behavior in relationships maintained by ratio of cost/benefits
- behavioral exchange theory by Kelly & Thibaut
- time-out
- A behavioral technique for extinguishing undesirable behavior by removing the reinforcing consequences of that behavior; typically, making the child sit in a corner or go to his or her room.
- Solution-Focused Founders
- Steve de Shazer, Insoo Kim Berg
- Hierarchical structure
- family functioning based on clear generational boundaries whereby parents maintain control/authority
- Family myths
- A set of beliefs on a distortion of historical reality and shared by all family members that help shape the rules of governing family functioning
- formula first-session task
- Solution-focused therapists routinely ask clients at the end of the first session to think about what they do not want to change about their lives as a result of ' therapy. This focuses them on strengths in their lives and begins the solution-generating process.
- postmodernism
- Contemporary antipositivism, according to which knowledge is viewed as relative and context dependent; questions assumptions of objectivity that characterize modern science. In family therapy, challenging the idea of scientific certainty and linked to the method of deconstruction.
- Communications theory
- study of relationships in terms of exchange of verbal/nonverbal messages
- what is the stance of CBT therapist
- observer, teacher, coach, and decides which behavior to increase or decrease
- CBT was inspired by...
- Ellis, Beck and Pavlov
- good enough mothering
- Winnicott's term for the average expectable parenting, which is sufficient to nurture a reasonably healthy child
- experiential theory focus on ---, ------ and is -----
- past, content, monadic
- empathy
- Understanding and acknowledging what someone is really feeling: in structural family therapy, empathy is used to help clients stop bickering and talk about their feelings.
- Define: What is acting out the parts of important characters to dramatize feelings and practice new ways of relating?
- Role playing, experiential term
- Bowenian Key Theoretical Construct
- Differentiation of self
- What are the major assumptions of the Haley and Madanes Strategic Approach?
- They followed these same ideas as the MRI, but with some variations: (1.) The founders of this group were concerned with the function a symptom served, as it marked a payoff in the system that resulted due to the structure of the system. (2.) They also formulated that rules followed a hierarchical order, and thus improving the hierarchical and boundary problems would prevent dysfunctional feedback loops from starting, a sort of "plan ahead" strategy. (3.) They believe families go through dysfunctional stages to get to functional ones. Thus, They were interested more in short sequences, but also in long ones that last months or years and reflect chronic structural problems.
- what is the stance of experiential therapist
- highly active, some blunt and confrontational, some warm and supportive
- Invariant prescription
- an intervention in which parents are directed to mysteriously sneak away together
- relative influence questions
- Questions designed to explore the extent to which the problem has dominated the client versus how much he or she has been able to control it.
- What does experiential theory emphasize?
- flexibility and freedom and expanding individual's experience
- fusion
- A blurring of psychological boundaries between self and others and a contamination of emotional and intellectual functioning; opposite of differentiation.
- reframing
- Relabeling a family's description of behavior to make it more amenable to theraputic change; for example, describing some one as, "discouraged" rather than "depressed"
- hermeneutics
- The art of analyzing literary texts or human experience, which are understood as fundamentally ambiguous, by interpreting levels of meaning.
- what is the goal of structural therapy
- structural change
- name the object relation techniques
- listening, empathy, interpretation, analytic neutrality
- What are the earliest object relation
- introjection and identification
- Psychodynamic Key Techniques
- Silence, Interpretation
- Family Sculpting
- A nonverbal experiential technique in which family members position themselves in a tableau that revleas significant aspects of their perceptions and feelings
- Reframing
- relabeling a family's description of behavior to make it more amenable to therapeutic change
- Bowenian Key Techniques
- Genograms, Process questions
- differentiation of self
- Psychological separation of intellect and emotions and independence of self from others; opposite of fusion.
- what therapy uses co-therapist
- experiential, by Whitaker
- disengagement
- Minuchin's term for psychological isolation that results from overly rigid boundaries around individuals and subsystems in a family
- second-order cybernetics
- The idea that any one attempting to observe and change a system is therefore part of that system.
- narcissism
- self-regard. the exaggerated self regard most people equate with narcissism is pathological narcissism
- what are parts
- a term by Schwartz, various reactive elements that make up a person's sub personalities
- contingency management
- Giving rewards and punishments based on children's behavior.
- Function of symptoms
- The idea that symptoms are often ways to distract/protect family members from threatening conflicts.
- what is the goal of experiential therapy
- find fulfilling role for oneself without concern for family as whole
- transference
- distorted emotional reactions to present relationships based on unresolved early family relations
- accommodation
- Elements of a system automatically adjust to coordinate their functioning: pepole may gave to work at it
- Bowenian Core Problem Dynamic
- Triangles, Emotional reactivity
- longing for appreciation, human being long to be appreciated and internalize this acceptance in the form of a strong self confident personality
- self psychology by Kohut
- solution-focused therapy
- Steve de Shazer's term for a style of therapy that emphasizes the solutions that families have already developed for their problems.
- entitlement
- Boszormenyi-Nagy term for the amount of merit a person accrues for behaving in an ethical manner toward others
- solution-focused therapy
- de Shazer's term for a style of therapy that emphasizes the solutions families have already developed for their problems.
- Parts
- Scwartz's term for the various reactive elements that make up a person's subpersonalities
- Narrative Key Theoretical Constructs
- Narrative theory, social constructionism
- customer
- de Shazer's term for a client who describes problem and is motivated to work on solving it.
- Internal family systems therapy
- A model of family therapy that uses systemic principles and techniques to understand and change intra-psychic processess, developed by Richard Schwartz
- what is the theory of change in CBT
- change reinforcment contingencies--> behavior change, reward appropriate behavior, modify specific behavior pattern
- modeling
- Observational learning.
- joining
- a structural family therapy term for accepting and accommodating to families to win their condifence and circumvent resistance
- Experiential Key Techniques
- Confrontation, Structured exercises
- schemas
- Cognitive constructions, or core beliefs, through which people filter their perceptions and structure their experience.
- Neutrality
- balanced acceptance of family members
- undifferentiated family ego mass
- Bowen's early term for emotional "stuck-togetherness" or fusion in the family, especially prominent in schizophrenic families.
- intensity
- Minuchin's term for changing maladaptive transactions by using strong affect, repeated intervention, or prolonged pressure.
- detriangulation
- The process by which an individual removes himself or herself from the motional field of two others.
- quid pro quo
- Literally, "something for something"; an equal exchange or substitution.
- hierarchical structure
- family functioning based on clear generational boundaries, where the parents maintain control and authority.
- Psychodynamic Key Theoretical Constructs
- Drives, Selfobjects, Internal Objects
- relationship experiments
- Suggestions for trying new ways of responding to family stresses, designed more to help family members understand how emotional processes work than to solve problems.
- problem-saturated stories
- The usual pessimistic and blaming accounts that clients bring to therapy, which are seen as helping keep them stuck.
- invisible loyalties
- Boszermenyi-Nagy term for unconscious commitments that children take on to help their famlies
- Strategic Key Theoretical Constructs
- Homeostasis, Feedback Loops
- Experiential Core Problem Dynamic
- Emotional suppression, Mystification
- introjection
- a primitive form of identification; taking in aspects of other people, which then become part of the self image
- Role playing
- Acting out the parts of important characters to dramatize feelings and practice new ways of relating
- Narrative Founders
- Michael White, David Epston
- Solution-Focused Key Techniques
- Focusing on solutions, Identifying exceptions
- what is SORKC
- It is a behavioral parent training
- maximize rewards and minimize cost in relationship
- theory of exchange by Kelly & Thibaut, object relation
- reconstruction
- The creation of new and more optimistic accounts of experience.
- multigenerational transmission process
- Murray Bowen's concept for the projection of varying degrees of immaturity to different children in the same family; the child who is most involved in the family emotional process emerges with the lowest level of differentiation and passes problems on to succeeding generations.
- reinforcement
- An event, behavior, or object that increases the rate of a particular response. A positive reinforcer is an event whose contingent presentation increases the rate of responding; a negative reinforcer is an event whose contingent withdrawal increases the rate of responding. Intermittent, or irregular, reinforcement is the most resistant to extinction.
- Narrative Key Techniques
- Externalization, Identifying unique outcomes, creating audiences of support
- unconscious commitments that children take on to help their families
- invisible loyalties by Nagy
- classical conditioning
- A form of respondent earning in which an unconditioned stimulus cues), such as food, which leads to an unconditioned response (UCR), such as salivation, is paired with a conditioned stimulus (CS), such as a bell, the result of which is that the CS begins to evoke the same response; used in the behavioral treatment of anxiety disorders.
- Metacommunication
- Every message has 2 levels: report and command. This term is the implied command or qualifying message.
- Satir believed that...
- good communication among family--> individual self expression
- Emotionally focused couples therapy
- A model of therapy based on attachment theory, in which the emotional longings beneath a couple's defense reactions are uncovered as they are taught to see the reactive nature of their struggles with each other, developed by Leslie Greenberg and Susan Johnson
- process questions
- Questions designed to help family members think about their own reactions to what others are doing.
- behavior exchange theory
- An explanation of behavior in relationships as maintained by a ratio of costs to benefits.
- Ordeal
- a paradoxical intervention in which client is directed to do something that is more of hardship than symptom
- Family life cycle
- Stages of family life from separation from one's parents to marriage, laving children, growing older, retirement, and, finally, death.
- Cybernetics
- study of control processes in systems, especially analysis of flow of info in closed systems
- reflecting team
- Tom Andersen's technique of having the observing team share their reactions with the family at the end of a session.
- structure
- recurrent patterns of interactions that define and stabilize the shape of relationships.
- parental acts and statements that express tha parents' image of their children; may be objective and distorted
- delineation, object relation term
- fixation
- partial arrest of attachment or mode of behavior from an early stage of development
- identification
- not merely imitation but appropriation of traits of an admired other
- Who were influential theorists in CBT?
- Wolpe, Skinner, Patterson, Liberman, Stuart, Thibaut, Kelly
- triangulation
- Detouring conflict between two people by involving a third person, stabilizing the relationship between the original pair.
- Paradox
- a self-contradictory statement based on a valid deduction from acceptable premises
- Solution-Focused Core Problem Dynamic
- Problem talk
- what are techniques used in behavioral parenting training
- 1. premack principle 2. shaping 3. token economy 4. contingency contracting 5. time out 6. Ellis's ABC theory
- contextual therapy
- Boszormenyi_nagy model that includes an appreciation of relational ethics
- a relationship based on direct personal contact, rather than artificial professional roles
- existential encounter, experiential term
- what are object relations
- internalized images of self and others based on early parent-child interactions that determine a person's mode of relationship to other people
- coalition
- an alliance between two persons or social units against a third
- object relations focus on---, ---- and is ----
- past, content, monadic
- regression
- return to a less mature level of functioning in the face of stress
- externalization
- Michael White's technique of personifying problems as external to persons.
- What are the major assumptions of the MRI?
- Families make common-sense but misguided attempts to solve their problems. The solution selection as well as its success is governed by system rules. The attempts go awry and the result is a positive feedback loop that makes the problem worse. What do you do? Three steps: (1.) identify the feedback loop, (2.) find the rules governing it, and (3.) change the loops and rules.
- collaborative model
- A more egalitarian view of the therapist's role; a stance advocated by critics of what they see as the authoritarianism in traditional approaches to family therapy.
- what is involved in CBT
- attitude change + reinforcement of behavior
- genogram
- A schematic diagram of the family system, using squares to represent male family members, circles to indicate female family members, horizontal lines for marriages, and vertical lines to indicate children.
- miracle question
- A technique that asks clients to imagine how things would be different if they woke up tomorrow and their problem was solved. Solution-focused therapists use the miracle question to help clients identify goals and potential solutions.
- projective identification
- a defense mechanism whereby unwanted aspects of the self are attributed to another person and that person is induced to behave in accordance with these projected attributed
- Experiential Founders
- Virginia Satir, Carl Whitaker
- hermeneutics
- The art of analyzing literary texts or human experience, understood as fundamentally ambiguous, by interpreting levels of meaning.
- emotional cutoff
- Bowen's term for flight from an unresolved emotional attachment.
- Premack principle
- Using high-probability behavior (preferred activities) to reinforce low-probability behavior (nonpreferred activities).
- Countertransference
- Emotional reactivity on the part of the therapist
- a primitive form of identification; taking in aspects of other people, which then become part of self image
- introjection, object relation term
- constructivism
- A relativistic point of view that emphasizes the subjective construction of reality. It implies that what we see in families may be based as much on our preconceptions as on what's actually going on.
- punishment and criticism to eleminate the undesirable response
- aversive control, CBT term
- what is the concept of object relations
- we relate to others on the basis of expectations formed by early experience (internal objects)
- cross-generational coalition
- an inappropriate alliance between a parent and child, who side together against a third member of the family
- false self
- Winnicott term for defensive facade that comes to dominate some people's dealings with others
- functional analysis of behavior
- In operant behavior therapy, a study of a particular behavior, what elicits it, and what reinforces it.
- what are the goals of object relations theory
- 1. internal experiences 2. history of experience 3. triggers that partners bring on 4. therapists input
- Family ritual
- (from Milan systemic model/Palazzoli) prescribes set of actions designed to change family systems' rules
- object relations theory
- psychoanalytic theory derived from melanie klein and developed by the British school (Bion, Fairbairn, Gunrtrip, Winnicott) that emphasizes relationships and attachment rather than libidinal and aggressive drives as the key issues of human concern
- whatis the theory of change in object relations theory
- 1.expression of repressed objects 2. resolution of repressed objects 3. detachment from bad objects 4. individuation
- Family rules
- a descriptive term for redundant behavior patterns
- separation-individuation
- the process whereby the infant begins, at about two months, to draw apart from the symbiotic bond with mother and develop his or her autonomous functioning
- theory of social exchange
- Thibaut and Kelley's I theory according to which people strive to maximize rewards and minimize costs in relationships.
- Psychodynamic Founders
- Nathan Ackerman, Henry Dicks, Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy
- amount of merit a person accrues for behaving in an ethical manner toward others
- entitlement by Nagy
- what is the central tenets of cognitive therapy
- our interpretation of other people's behavior effects the way we respond to them
- self object
- kohut's term for a person related to not as a separate individual but as an extension of the self
- the tendency to exaggerate the virtues of someone
- idealization
- Strategic therapy is ___ and does not ____ the client or offer clients ___.
- brief, educate, insight
- family structure
- the functional organization of a family that determines how family members interact
- object relations
- internalized images of self and others based on early parent child interactions that determine a persons mode of relationship to other people
- what is the theory of change in experiential theory
- 1. unblocking defenses to bring vitality, change the foundation,
- the term Bowen used for transference
- family projection process
- Family homeostasis
- The tendency of families to resist change to maintain steady state.
- unique outcomes
- Michael White's term for times when clients acted free of their problems, even if they were unaware of doing so. Narrative therapists identify unique outcomes as a way to help clients challenge negative views of themselves.
- Good me, bad me, not me
- by Sullivan
- the term Shapiro used for transference
- delineation
- Strategic therapy
- any of several artful approaches that aim to manipulate behavior change to solve family problems
- scapegoating
- Vogel term for transference
- Bowenian Founder
- Murray Bowen
- Internal family system
- term coined by Schwartz, intrapsychic processes, parts
- I-position
- A statement that acknowledges one's personal opinions rather than blames others ("You never.. .") or moralizes ("Children should always. . .").
- reinforcement reciprocity
- Exchanging rewarding behaviors between family members.
- appropriation of traits of an admired other
- identification, object relation term
- Structural Key Theoretical Constructs
- Subsystems, Boundaries
- distorted emotional reactions to present relationships based on unresolved early family relations
- transference
- Who founded the Milan Model?
- Palazzoli was a prominent Italian psychoanalyst. She and her team of 8 other analysts read the works of Bateson, Haley... and did lots of research. In 1980, they split, with ½ continuing research and the other doing training.
- What does experiential theory consider the cause of problem?
- emotional suppression and denial of impulses
- Pretend techniques
- a paradoxical intervention in which family members are asked to pretend to engage in symptomatic behavior, paradox is if they are pretending to have symptom then symptom can't be real
- what are the two techniques of CBT
- 1. behavioral parent training by Patterson 2. Behavioral couple therapy by Jacobson
- contingencies of reinforcement
- The specific pattern of reinforcing (or punishing) consequences of a behavioral sequence.
- 3 main models of Strategic Therapy:
- Mental Research Institute (MRI), Haley and Madanes, and the Milan systemic model.
- Structural Founder
- Salvador Minuchin
- Circular causality
- the idea that events are related through series of interacting loops/repeating cycles
- Madanes posits four categories that problems are the result of:
- (a.) desire to control and dominate, (b.) desire to be loved, (c.) desire to love and protect others, and (d.) desire to repent and forgive.
- token economy
- A system of rewards using points, which can be accumulated and exchanged for reinforcing items or behaviors.
- Directives
- homework designed to help families interrupt homeostatic patterns of problem-maintaining behavior
- what are the stages of object relations therapy
- 1. insight 2.trust 3. identify projective mechanism 4. recognition that present problems emerge from past
- The dominant approaches of the 21st century have encouraged therapists to focus on ___ rather than ___ and have encouraged therapists to be ___ rather than ___.
- cognition, behavior, collaborative, manipulative
- Structural Key Techniques
- Enactments, Boundary making
- scaling questions
- Solution-focused therapists use scaling questions to identify exceptions and to build a positive mind-set. Using a 1 to 10 scale, clients rate how much they want to re solve their problems, how bad the problem is, how much better it is than it was at the time of the last session, and so on. If the problem is rated a 4, the therapist can ask why it isn't a 1 or how the client can move it to a 5.
- contingency contracting
- A behavior therapy technique whereby agreements are made between family members to exchange rewards for desired behavior.
- not-knowing
- Anderson and Goolishian's term for approaching families with as few preconceptions as possible.
- Experiential Key Theoretical Constructs
- Authenticity, Self-actualization
- cognitive-behavior therapy
- Treatment that emphasizes attitude change as well as reinforcement of behavior.
- Circular questioning
- a method of interviewing (Milan) in which questions are asked that highlight differences among family members
- Cognitive-Behavioral Key Theoretical Constructs
- Reinforcement, Extinction, Schemas
- object relation theory and founder
- By scharff in USA, and Melanie Klien in Britain, emphasizes on the need for secure attachment relationship.
- unconcious
- memories, feelings, and impulses of which a person is unaware. Often used as a noun, but more appropriatley limited to use as an adjective
- internal objects
- Mental images and fantasies of oneself and others; formed by early interactions with caregivers
- Strategic therapy's big names (3)
- Jay Haley, John Weakland, Mara Selvini Palazzoli
- what is the stance of therapist in object relation
- detective, referee, neutral
- deconstruction
- A postmodern approach to exploring meaning by taking apart and examining taken-for-granted categories and assumptions, making possible newer and sounder constructions of meaning.
- Strategic therapy taught us two major pieces of insight into human nature:
- (1) that families often perpetuate problems by their own actions (2) that directives tailored to the needs of a particular family can sometimes bring about sudden and decisive change
- social learning theory
- Understanding and treating behavior using principles from social and developmental psychology as well as from learning theory.
- what is the theory of dysfunction in CBT
- learned response reinforce behaviors
- Who came up with emotionally focused therapy?
- Susan Johnson and Greenberg
- Solution-Focused Key Theoretical Constructs
- Language creates reality
- Structural Core Problem Dynamic
- Enmeshment/Disengagement
- Self Actualization
- Roger's term for innate human tendency for each of us to seek what is best for us. A tendency that gets subverted by the need to please but can be released again in the presence of unconditional positive regard.
- exceptions
- de Shazer's term for times when a client is temporarily free of his or her problem. Solution-focused therapists focus on exceptions to help clients build on successful problem-solving skills.
- First-order change
- a superficial change in a system that stays invariant
- shaping competence
- Reinforcing positives rather than confronting deficiences
- Strategic therapy grew out of which theory?
- Communications theory
- visitor
- de Shazer's term for a client who does not wish to be part of therapy, does not have a complaint, and does not wish to work on anything.
- self actualization
- an experiential term, innate human tendency for each of us to seek what is best for us and can be released in the presence of unconditional positive regard
- boundaries
- A concept used in structural family therapy to describe emotional barriers that protect and enhance the integrity of individuals, subsystems, and families.
- Second-order change
- a basic change in the structure of a system
- Self Psychology
- Kohut's version of psychoanalysis that emphasizes the need for attachment and appreciation rather than sex and aggression
- Who founded the Mental Research Institute (MRI)?
- It is a group started by Jackson who worked with Bateson, as well as with Haley on the Bateson project.
- Who founded the Haley and Madanes Strategic approach?
- They were heavily influenced by Erikson, Bateson, and Minuchin. Erikson believed the unconscious was full of wisdom; thus, he didn't need to give people insight, just help them get access to it on their own.
- Positive connotation
- ascribing positive motives to family behavior to promote family cohesion and avoid resistance to therapy