theory: strategic family therapy Flashcards
Strategic Family Therapy
Developed by Milton Erickson, this approach emphasizes altering behavior and resolving presenting symptoms rather than helping clients gain insight and personal awareness. Using directive strategies tailored to each family, strategic family therapists aim to resolve the problem as quickly as possible. Consequently, this type of family counseling is generally short-term.
Milton Erickson
Developed strategic family therapy.
Jay Haley
Helped found the Bateson Group, the Mental Research Institute (MRI), and the Family Research Institute, and contributed to the development of MRI Interactional Family Therapy
MRI Interactional Family Therapy
A strategic family therapy approach developed by Jay Haley. MRI encourages the exploration of family interactional patterns to understand and effectively resolve family issues.
quid pro quo
The propensity of individuals to treat others as they are treated. This “reciprocal behavior” is present in all families, and often unspoken.
redundancy principle
A family’s tendency to interact with each other in the same way. It is unusual for those patterns of behavior to change or expand
punctuation
The conviction by individuals that their verbal communication, especially during a conflict, occurs in reaction to someone else
relabeling and reframing
A strategic family therapy technique that involves interpreting a family’s situation in a new way to encourage family members to view their problem in a more favorable light.
prescribing the symptom
In strategic family counseling, the counselor tells clients to keep engaging in their troublesome behavior; by following the counselor’s advice, clients recognize that they are choosing to perpetuate the problem
ordeal
A paradoxical technique that asks clients to complete an undesirable but health-promoting task before participating in the worrisome behavior
pretend technique
Encourages clients to simulate their symptoms in order to realize that they are able to exert some control over what they say and do, as well as over the outcome of the situation