Solution-Focused and Narrative Therapy (Week 12) Flashcards
Who are the key figures in Solution-focused Therapy?
Steve deShazer
Insoo Kim Berg
Who are the key figures in Narrative Therapy?
Michael White
David Epston
What is the key focus of Solution-focused and Narrative Therapies?
Problems are maintained by problem-focused constructions and conversations occurring within and between people.
What are “problem talk” in Solution-focused and “problem-saturated stories” Narrative Therapies?
These tend to equate problems with personhood. Problems are discussed as if they are within a person, always occurring, and outside of one’s ability to influence. This invites a perspective that is discouraging, demoralizing, and dehumanizing. The idea is that the more a problem receives focus, the more it grows.
What are “strengths” in Solution-focused and Narrative Therapies?
These may include resources in a person’s life personally, relationally, financially, socially, spiritually, etc.
These can be assessed by directly asking the client about areas of life that are going well, by recognizing that weaknesses/problems often correspond with associated resources, and by listening carefully for exceptions unique to problems and for areas where resources may go unnoticed.
What are “exceptions” in Solution-focused and “unique outcomes” in Narrative Therapy?
Identified incidences (present or past) of when the problem has been nonexistent or less intense, or times when what is desired/preferred has been present, even minimally or momentarily.
These confirm that (1) what’s wanted is attainable, (2) what “works” is already within the client’s repertoire, and (3) the client can access strengths and resources to make it happen.
The client may need to be prompted to reflect on these incidents:
Tell me about times when the problem is less likely to occur or is less severe.
Tell me about a time when you expected the problem to occur but it didn’t.
Tell me about what you do/what others do that seem to make things better.
Tell me about places or times when the problem is not as bad.
What are “dominant discourses” in Narrative Therapy?
Culturally-generated narratives about life that are oppressive in nature, contributing to the problem-saturated story and negatively influencing one’s sense of self. Focus is on what one “should” want.
What are “local discourses” in Narrative Therapy?
Narratives that tend to come from more marginalized sources, contributing to preferred narratives and positively influencing one’s sense of self. Focus is on what one “does” want.
What are the goals of Solution-focused Therapy?
To decrease problem-talk and increase solution-talk
(Thereby increasing client’s sense of self-agency, identifying goals that reflect outcomes that the client sees as desirable and preferable, identifying and discussing exceptions to the problem and using those experiences to identify what works, and repeatedly identifying, attending to, and discussing client’s strengths and resources).
What are the goals of Narrative Therapy?
To deconstruct the client’s problem-saturated story and re-author the client’s life to reflect their preferred narrative.
(Thereby increasing client’s sense of self-agency, identifying goals that reflect outcomes that the client sees as desirable and preferable, identifying and discussing exceptions to the problem and using those experiences to identify what works, and repeatedly identifying, attending to, and discussing client’s strengths and resources).
What characterizes the therapeutic relationship in Solution-focused and Narrative Therapy?
Non-expert oriented, collaborative role for therapist.
Beginner’s mind (therapist is the co-constructor of solutions in SFT or the investigative reporter/co-author in NT).
The client’s perspective is privileged.
“The problem is the problem.” (Therapist meets people separately from their problems in NT).
Strengths and resources are assumed and acknowledged consistently.
What is a “formula first session task” in Solution-focused therapy?
This intervention is given to every client before or after the first session. The assignment is to notice things in your life that are going well/that you don’t want to change.
What are “exception questions” in Solution-focused therapy?
An intervention in asking clients to identify instances in which the problem was not present.
What is a “miracle question” in Solution-focused therapy?
An intervention asking client to build vision for what life would look like if the problem were no longer an issue. The key is to ask follow-up questions to get client to identify concrete, actionable behaviors that could help the client experience their goal sooner rather than later.
What is a “scaling question” in Solution-focused therapy?
An intervention asking client to identify a number that represents where they are on a scale of 1-10. How did you get to this number? What could you do to increase it by 1? What number could you aim for?