Essentials of Family Therapy

Essentials of Family Therapy
Author: William M. Walsh
Publisher:
Total Pages: 180
Release: 2002-01-01
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9780891082972

Provides an overview of several popular systemic approaches to family therapy. This book is designed for counseling and social work graduate students in family systems and in marriage and family therapy classes. It is also useful for clinicians in practice and professionals preparing for licensure examination.

Handbook Of Family Therapy

Handbook Of Family Therapy
Author: Alan S. Gurman
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 817
Release: 2014-07-22
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1317773063

First published in 1981. This volume is unique as to date no previous book, and no collection of papers one could assemble from the literature, addresses or achieves for the field of family therapy what is accomplished in this handbook. It responds to a pressing need for a comprehensive source that will enable students, practitioners and researchers to compare and assess critically for themselves an array of major current clinical concepts in family therapy.

Bilingualism, Culture, and Social Justice in Family Therapy

Bilingualism, Culture, and Social Justice in Family Therapy
Author: marcela polanco
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 96
Release: 2021-04-12
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 3030660362

This volume advocates for justice in language rights through its explorations of bilingualism in family therapy, from the perspectives of eighteen languages identified by the authors: Black Talk/Ebonics/Slang, Farsi, Fenglish, Arabic, Italian, Cantonese Chinese, South Korean, Mandarin Chinese, Vietnamese, Spanish, Chilean Spanish, Mexican Spanish, Colombian Spanglish, Madrileño Spanish, Spanglish, Pocho Spanish, Colloquial Spanish, and English. It identifies standard English as the current language most often used across family therapy programs and services in the United States. The book discusses efforts to respond to the rapidly changing linguistic landscape and the increasingly high demand for appropriate therapy services that respond effectively to diverse families in America. It discusses recruitment and training of linguistically diverse family therapists and strategies to promote linguistic equality to support the rights of family therapists, their practices, and the communities they serve. Chapters explore ways to integrate languages in professional and personal lives, including the improvisational, self-taught translanguaging skills and practices that go beyond the lexical and grammatical rules of a language. The book describes the creative use of native or heritage languages to ensure that the juxtaposition of English therapeutic and daily-life landscapes is integrated into family therapy settings. It discusses contextual, relational, therapeutic, and training potential offered by bilingualism as well as the necessary transmutations in theory and practice. This volume is an essential resource for clinicians, therapists, and practitioners as well as researchers, professors, and graduate students in family studies, clinical psychology, and public health as well as all interrelated disciplines.

Family Therapy

Family Therapy
Author: S. Richard Sauber
Publisher: Aspen Publishers
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1985
Genre: Medical
ISBN:

Basic Concepts in Family Therapy

Basic Concepts in Family Therapy
Author: Linda Berg Cross
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 640
Release: 2014-02-25
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 1317789830

Gain confidence and creativity in your family therapy interventions with new, up-to-date research!Basic Concepts in Family Therapy: An Introductory Text, Second Edition, presents twenty-two basic psychological concepts that therapists may use to understand clients and provide successful services to them. Each chapter focuses on a single concept using material from family therapy literature, basic psychological and clinical research studies, and cross-cultural research studies. Basic Concepts in Family Therapy is particularly useful to therapists working in a family context with child- or adolescent-referred problems, and for students and clinicians treating the problems they see every day in their community. The book builds on the strengths of the first edition, incorporating ideas and articles that have become worthy of investigating since 1990 into the original text. This new edition also introduces five new chapters on resiliency and poverty, adoption, chronic illness, spirituality and religion, and parenting strategies. The new chapters make the book far more relevant for students and clinicians try ing to use family theory and technique in response to the problems they see in their communities. Basic Concepts in Family Therapy will assist you in offering clients better services by providing a deeper understanding of the contemporary family in its various forms, the psychological bonds that shape all families, and the developmental stages of the family life cycle. This exploration of how family demography, stages and life cycles affect family functions is a solid foundation from which all of the therapeutic concepts in this book can be explored. Some of the facets of family therapy you will explore in Basic Concepts in Family Therapy are: the importance of spirituality and religion in family therapy generational boundaries, closeness, and role behaviors managing a family's emotions defining problems and generating and evaluating possible solutions teaching children specific attitudes, values, social skills, and norms transracial adoptions and normative processes and developmental issues of adoptive parents strategies for reducing conflict . . . and much more!Basic Concepts in Family Therapy will help to broaden your understanding of the ways families function in general. You can use the effective concepts explored in this text to make a thorough assessment of the impact of a disorder on a child and on the rest of his or her family, as well as how family dynamics might have shaped or exacerbated the problems. The concepts described in this text can be customized to clients’cultural values to avoid unnecessary resistance. As a new therapist, you will gain confidence in your assessments, and if you are already a seasoned professional, you will gain creativity in your interventions.

Family Therapy

Family Therapy
Author: Janice M. Rasheed
Publisher: SAGE
Total Pages: 537
Release: 2010-07-29
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1412905745

This text will provide a comprehensive overview of traditional and evolving theoretical models of family therapy and intervention techniques. The objective of this text is to enable a student to gain beginning proficiency as a family therapist along with understanding the impact of a client's race, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, disability, gender issues, age, socioeconomic status, disability, and differences from the “traditional” family on family assessment and intervention. The book has six goals, as follows: (1) acquaint students with the theoretical underpinnings of various approaches to assessing and intervening with families (2) assist students in understanding the similarities, differences and strategies of change among the major models of family therapy (3) introduce the student to the current available research on the effectiveness of different approaches to family intervention (4) help students assess family functioning from a life cycle perspective and make a valid plan, taking into account client's race, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, disability, gender issues, age, socioeconomic status, disability, and differences from the “traditional” family (5) help students develop techniques and strategies related to stages of the intervention in family therapy (6) enable the student to critique the appropriateness of the theoretical models and its intervention techniques according to family developmental factors as well as the particular needs of the family. Features: (1) Comprehensive coverage of familty therapy theory and research 2) Presentation of clinical process issues unique to family therapy (3) Inclusion of family live cycle and developement issues and the impact on family assessment and treatment planning (4) Interventions in diverse family structures (5) Interventions with special family issues such as substance abuse, domestic violence and poverty (6) An emphasis throughout on helping students to develop beginning competencies in family therapy practice (7) Numerous case examples

Models Of Family Therapy

Models Of Family Therapy
Author: William A. Griffin
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 172
Release: 2013-10-28
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1135889198

Models of Family Therapy provides an overview of established family therapy models. All classification schemes of family therapy models must reduce ideological complexity, ignore overlap, and generalize for the purposes of category inclusion and exclusion. Nonetheless, orientation differences do exist and the authors make these differences clear by placing ideas and methods into categories. To facilitate learning how the dimensions of each model fit with other models, this book enhances comparability by using the same general outline in all chapters. In these outlines, the critical components of each model are broken down into a few core assumptions, terms, techniques, and methods. These critical components are summarized consistent with their description in the original publications. Some of these models include structural, strategic, behavioral, psychoeducational, and experiential therapy. Because of the style of presentation, this book can be useful as a primary text or supplement in a marriage and family therapy course. In addition, graduate students and professionals can benefit from this guidebook in order to prepare for any state or national examination on marriage and family therapy.

The Book of Family Therapy

The Book of Family Therapy
Author: Andrew Ferber
Publisher:
Total Pages: 726
Release: 1972
Genre: Family psychotherapy
ISBN:

TABLE OF CONTENTS. SECTION 1: WHAT IS A FAMILY THERAPIST? 1. The primary task. 2. We're in family therapy. 3. We became family therapists / I. Boszormenyi-Nagy, C. Beels, E. Auerswald, A. Ferber, A. Napier, C. Whitaker, P. Guerin, T. Fogarty, J. Haley, C. Attneave, J. Weakland. 4. Becoming a family therapist. 5. Beginning and experienced familiy therapists / J. Haley. 6. What family therapists do / C. Beels and A. Ferber. SECTION 2: TOOLS OF THE TRADE. Introduction / A. Ferber. 7. A training program / M. Mendelsohn and A. Ferber. 8. How to go beyond the use of language / A. Bodin and A. Ferber. 9. The use of video-tapes / A. Bodin. 10. What to read / F. Sander and C. Beels. 11. How people interact / A. Kendon. SECTION 3: TEACHERS AND LEARNERS. Introduction / A. Ferber. 12. The trainee speaks. 13. Is everybody watching? / H. Mendelsohn and A. Ferber. 14. Study your own family / P. Guerin and T. Fogart. 15. The therapist's family, friends, and colleagues / A. Ferber and C. Whitaker. 16. A conversation about co-therapy / A. Napier and C. Whitaker. 17. Making it / L. Greenhill. SECTION 4: STRINGS IN THE BOW. Introduction / A. Napier. 18. How to succeed in family therapy / J. Ranz and A Ferber. 19. Crisis intervention / R. Rabkin. 20. On unbecoming family therapists / R. Fisch, P. Watzlawick, J. Weakland and A. Bodin. 21. Multiple family therapy / H. P. Laqueur. 22. Network therapy / R. Speck and C. Attneave. 23. Critique of a sacred cow / A. Scheflen and A. Ferber. 24. Families, change, and the ecological perspective / E. Auerswald. APPENDIX: Films about family therapy.