Chapter 19-Teaching Family Counseling Flashcards
How can counselor educators usebest practices in the field of family counseling with students?
Create opportunities for students to:
- interact with best practices in family counseling,
- try on new behaviors
- Discard old myths about families
What thoughts do students often bring to family counseling class about families.
- There are normal families, then the rest.
2. Thoughts about how families “should” be
How can instructors help students move beyond entrenched perspectives about families?
- Students encounter family norms and values that genuinely challenge ways of knowing about family
- Their understandings of families are never “true” or final
- Are contextual, shaped by social class, gender, history, ethnicity, and culture.
RE: families, social interactions and economic factors have affected:
- Definition, structure, and functioning of the family
- How the life cycle of the family may progress
- Issues that may bring families to counseling
With the unique and diverse needs of families now, what can help counterbalance the challenges that bring them to family counseling?
- Paying attention to the diversity
2. Helping them identify their unique resources
To achieve the necessary qualities of challenge and support in family counseling instruction, family counseling can be grounded in what principles ?
- Constructivist
- Multicultural
- Cognitive developmental
In teaching family counseling, what does principles of constructivist teaching call for?
- Abandonment of socially stereotyped definitions of family
- Definitions shaped by family’s unique social history and context
- Attentiveness to diversity in all aspects of family understanding, assessment, and intervention.
- Cognitive developmental framework promoting students’ abilities to formulate counseling intervention with unique family culture
The evolution of marriage and family therapy is seen in the postmodern approaches, such as:
- solution-focused and solution-oriented
- narrative therapies
- Therapist moves from being an expert to collaborator, participant, and observer-engages client/family in deconstructing the story of their lives
What do these postmodern therapy models focus on for the therapist and for therapy?
- Therapist does not have solution, gives client opportunity to define what would be helpful, what solution to seek, and how to co-create solutions in therapy.
- Focus on strengths
- Look at social issues that define meaning people give to problems
How can counselor educators encourage the development of multicultural counseling competence?
- Students’ awareness of personal biases
- Seek knowledge about families’ unique cultural compositions
- Integrate family counseling models to increase cultural relevance of counseling
To accomplish multicultural competence aims, the course emphasizes:
- Dialogue among students and:
A. Other students
B. Their family members
C. The instructor. - Culturally focused reflective journaling
- Family history genograms
- Texts that expose students to influence of ethnic values on family life
The instructor meets students’ efforts toward cultural competence with:
- Supportive guidance
- Affirmation
- Individualized feedback
RE: family counseling, a positive relationship exists between:
- Counselor’s level of cognitive development and ability to comprehend complex family dynamics
- Higher levels, greater ability to “read and flex,” more accurately assess client needs and choose appropriate interventions
What are 3 assumptions that drive development-oriented education?
- Process of accommodation and assimilation
- The notion of hierarchy
- The idea of mismatch
Describe the first assumption: process of accommodation and assimilation.
- Learner initially attempts to assimilate the experience into existing cognitive structures.
- When structures prove insufficient, learner creates new meaning-making structures that accommodate for new experience.
- Disparity results in anxiety or disequilibrium, provides drive for cognitive growth.