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Paperback Family Therapy Basics Book

ISBN: 0534519717

ISBN13: 9780534519711

Family Therapy Basics

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

This text provides readers with the critical link between theory and practice illustrating how to actually "do" family therapy. It is a nuts-and-bolts primer that takes students step-by-step through... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

reliable purchase

I needed a book for class. This book was a edition earlier than what I needed, but that was my doing. It was in good shape and shipped in a reasonable amount of time.

Accessible and Interesting

A great family therapy book, using and building upon case examples to illustrate each concept. Engaging and easy to read, I Would highly recommend for a Family Therapy course.

Easy read for beginning therapists

This book was amazingly helpful in my therapy class. It really brings to life what I shortly hope to be doing for my career. It does not read like a typical text book and is easily understandable and applicable.

Great counseling resource!

This book offered good instructions for conducting family therapy, but it was not written for Christian counselors. This was strictly a "techniques" manual. Although the book was theologically limited because of its focus on secular counseling methods, helpful concepts were found. The strategic questions Dr. Worden asked were very insightful. However, an inexperienced therapist would have difficulty recalling questions during specific points of the session. One would have to compile these questions into notes and then refer to it during family counseling, which may inadvertently hamper the therapeutic process since the counselor is distracted with asking the "right" questions instead of understanding the family's presenting problem.The number and length of sessions was left up to the discretion of individual therapists. Considering that Dr. Worden wrote the book for "a beginning therapist," he failed to answer his initial question, "What do I do next?" in regards to this important aspect of counseling. Granted there are various factors involved with different families, Dr. Worden still should have recommended his own standard number and duration of sessions as a "rule of thumb." He did mention that HMOs found five to 10 sessions the "acceptable standard" for treatment (34), but it was stated as an expected fact when one counsels HMO clients.Dr. Worden included ways of confronting family members during a therapy session, even though he said it "may harm as much as it helps" (67). These questions seemed harsh and unproductive. For example, he asked, "Mrs. Martin, your complaints fall on deaf ears. I wonder why you persistently bring them up?" Then he said, "Cindy, you have a one-note act. All you can do is interrupt in a hostile fashion" (68). This line of questioning and remark might actually erode the therapeutic alliance instead of helping the overall counseling process. In redirecting the session from "the emotional to the cognitive," Dr. Worden used some closed-ended questions, such as "Is this what happens at home?" or "Do the same issues start the same fights?" (76). These questions were meant to allow family members to "interact in problem-solving mode with the therapist," but instead of allowing for a comprehensive cognitive reflection, it would probably yield only simple "yes or no" answers (76).Dr. Worden believed that "continually" asking someone, "How did that make you feel?" was counterproductive for feelings to "emerge" and exhibited in counseling (86), but if the therapist never asked the client to label their feelings, an outburst of emotions may be misinterpreted and thus mislabeled. Also, Dr. Worden never quantified what he meant by "continually."According to Dr. Worden, play and drawing therapy can be useful tools for seeing the family from a child's perspective; however, asking a child to "draw a picture of everyone in your family, including yourself, doing something," may be taken literally and the result will b
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