Summary of the Report of Group 2
By: Jinky E. Radones
Angellene Sarmiento
Anabelle Uy
a. Intergenerational relationships
-focus and implications treatment
b. Transitions and development
-focus and implications treatment
c. Family Structure
- focus and implications treatment
d. Individual experiences
- focus and implications treatment
e. Intergeneration of practice :common Elements
-Naturalist Change
-Therapeutic Change
a. Intergenerational relationships
b. Transitions and development
• The family is not a usual vehicle for socialization within a given culture, but it also involves more specific traditions, roles, rewards, obligations that bind the family members together.
• Many family therapist have been recognized previous generations as a major influence on a family life in a present.
• Family myths.
• Change can be brought about the individuals by facilitating an inner resynthesis of past experience.
• Maintain the focus that the interpersonal can be helped to focus the interactions rather tan the internal pain alone and to discover the important insights while also claiming the necessary strength to heal.
DEVELOPMENTAL STAGES
1. Forming relationship
2. Commitment
3. Parenting,goals and values
4. Adolescence
5. Launching Children
To trace a family’s or individual’s development over time , the family therapist must understand traditional and alternative patterns of evolution.
i. GOOD FAMILIES CHIEF
ii. GOOD FAMILIES HAVE SWITCHBOARD OPERATION
iii. GOOD FAMILIES ARE HOSPITABLE
iv. GOOD FAMILIES DEAL SQUARELY WITH DORECTNESS
v. GOOD FAMILIES PRICE WITH RITUALS
vi. GOOD FAMILIES ARE AFFECTIONATE
vii. GOOD FAMILIES SENSE OF PLACE
viii. GOOD FAMILIES FIND WAY TO BE INVOLVED WITH CHILDREN
ix. GOOD FAMILIES HONOR THEIR ELDERS
c. Family Structure
Study Family Structure is primarily concerned with interactions within the family determine it’s organization.
The family organism, like other organizations, functions through an internal organization of subsystems. ( couple, paternal, sibling.) families who are not able to meet this needs often lack models for sufficient functioning and thus seek treatment.
It is basic practice in the family therapy to assess the pattern of leadership in each family and to develop a collaborative relationship with the family members who has the greatest ability influence to family life.
d. Individual experiences
Despite the tendency in the field of family therapy to deemphasize the analysis of therapist dimensions within the individual, many approaches provide very helpful information related to how family therapist would address individual concerns.
SOME PERSPECTIVE INDERSTANDING INDIVIDUALS FROM THE SYSTEM PERSPECTIVE:
-Self –esteem = Experiential family focuses primarily on individual growth.
SIGNIFICANT RELATIONSHIP
• SENSES
• THOUGHTS
• FEELINGS
• INTENTIONS
• ACTIONS
e. Intergeneration of practice :common Elements
-Naturalist Change
In family therapy, models that focus on development, narratives and informations flow within the family often use the occurrences of change in relationships. Development theory implies that change is an inevitable part of family life.
-Therapeutic Change
In contrast to these ideas about the naturalist change, other approaches focus solely on how change occurs in a family therapy session. Structural, strategic, and interrupting the behavioral models emphasize that the behavioral changes can ba brought about without insight or cognition by attending to interactional sequences and interrupting those that become associated with the identified problems.
-Therapeutic Relationships
Therapeutic Relationship is one of the critical factors in the effectiveness of the treatment. As a beginning of the therapist critique each model, they should ask: How answer this questions advise students to learn as much about people as they do about the models.
CONCEPTUALIZATION + IMPLEMENTATION = MARITAL AND FAMILY THERAPY
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