Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;
Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;
H to show hint;
A reads text to speech;
20 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Circular questioning is likely to |
Probed differences on how family members see problems |
|
Family therapists most closely identify with solution focused therapy |
Deshazer |
|
SFBT argues that |
Determining how and why a problem arose |
|
Notion of client resistance to change |
Challenged by SFBT therapists |
|
Miracle question |
How future will look once problems is gone |
|
Exception finding questions are efforts to a new play clients |
Build on past successes |
|
Solution oriented therapists offer |
Create a collaborative dialogue |
|
Narrative therapists deflecting teams |
Support family development and new narrative about themselves |
|
Therapists and clients discuss solutions they would consider together within the the |
Solution talk |
|
Within the therapeutic client relationship, clients are characterized by all except |
Non participants |
|
The belief that our view of reality is based on stories that we circulate about ourselves |
Narrative metaphor |
|
Narrative therapists believe of current |
Dominant stories |
|
The goal of narrative therapy is to create |
Internalized new stories |
|
When working with families, narrative families consider themselves |
Collaborative partners |
|
Deconstruction according to narrative therapists |
Family of assumptions about themselves |
|
Narrative therapists believe the attempts to make sense of our lives through narrative t |
Self narratives |
|
Narrative therapy was developed to |
Re-examine stories that shapes their lives |
|
Externalizing our restraining problem is into |
Help separate ones identity from his or her problem |
|
In externalizing conversations narrative therapists try to get clients |
Attach new meaning |
|
Whites narrative approach encourages families to |
Create alternative accounts of their lives |