What theory has the following theory of change:
Change occurs by separating patient from problem and creating a new narrative or story, which emphasizes the client’s competencies and strengths. –person comes in with story about self, explore story and create new story to allow more opportunities
What is Narrative Therapy
Change occurs through insight and understanding of early, unresolved issues.
What is Theory of Change
Change occurs by learning to modify dysfunctional thought patterns.
What is CBT
This theory has this theory of change:
Change happens through mindfulness, developing skills to manage distress tolerance and emotional regulation, and improving interpersonal problem solving skills
what is Dialectical Behavior Therapy?
Used to explore patients’ relationships wit themselves or others in their lives. A form of role-playing, the client addresses an empty chair as if another person was in it in order to act out two or more sides of a discussion. What is this technique called
What is empty chair technique
Questions that clarify meaning and help people unpack their stories. They encourage clients to situate their narratives in broader contexts. – concerned with language and what the meaning the speaker is intending – someone said they were an underachiever so can you tell me more what it means to be an underachiever – by unpacking you can get in touch with influences – clarify meaning of language
What are deconstructive questions
Continual use of primitive defense mechanisms as an
adult.
What are defense mechanisms
1. View of self – negative view of self (“I’m not worth anything.”) 2. View of the world (“Everybody hates me, no room for me.”) 3. View of prospects for the future (“There are no hopes for my future.”)
What is Negative Cognitive Triad
improve their emotional and cognitive regulation is a treatment goal for what theory?
What is DBT?
Early self-objects are those empathetic or attuned caretakers who perform vital functions for the infant that it cannot carry out itself is a key concept of what theory?
Self-Psychology
What is Solution Focused Therapy
Establish a holding environment for the client and the opportunity to develop a secure attachment relationship.
Observe and reflect the ways in which a client projects previous object relationships into therapeutic interactions (projections).
Avoid being pulled into the client’s maladaptive patterns
Are examples of what?
What are interventions
The experiment process includes experiencing, observing, reflecting, and planning. These steps are conducted through thought testing, discovery, activity, and/or observation. Give tasks for people to try something new to observe, reflecting and plan what you would do
What are behavioral experiments
Mindfulness, Distress tolerance, Interpersonal Effectiveness and Emotion Regulation skills are what in DBT?
What are Interventions
In self psychology, the need for a supportive relationship that the patient can oppose in order to grow is called what?
Adversarial Transference
The therapist asks the client to think of a time in his life when the particular problem did not exist and what the client did differently during this time
What are exception questions
Uncover and interpret unconscious impulses and defenses against them.
● Examine client’s self-awareness and understanding of the influence of the past on present behavior.
● Examine unresolved conflicts and symptoms that arise from past dysfunctional
relationships and manifest themselves in the need and desire to abuse substances.
What are Treatment Goals
This theory has this theory of change?
What is Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy
each of us is a self-determining being who can choose future behaviors and hold ourselves consciously responsible for how we are acting, thinking, feeling, and also for our physiological states. is a key concept to what theory?
What is Reality Therapy?
All persons have the capacity for self-awareness.
• As free beings, everyone must accept the responsibility that comes with freedom.
• Each person has a unique identity that can only be known through relationships with others.
• Each person must continually recreate himself. The meaning of life and of existence is never fixed; rather, it constantly changes.
• Anxiety is part of the human condition.
• Death is a basic human condition that gives significance to life. These are key concepts to what theory?
What is Existential Therapy
Rather than focusing on the problem that brought the client in, the therapist can ask the client questions to focus on the positive changes that have been occurring. Example: “What’s different, or better since the last time we met?”
Presupposing Change
The therapist assumes a nondirective role.
● Establishes a holding environment for the client and the opportunity to develop a
secure attachment relationship.
What is the role of the therapist?
Activating Event, Belief and Consequences are key concepts to what theory?
REBT
What is reality therapy
A strategy in which the therapist encourages or instructs the client to engage in or practice the symptom is called what?
What is prescribing the symptom?