Across
- 1. Used by systemic family therapists, a non-judgmental and impartial position, eliciting all viewpoints intended to enable the therapist to avoid being caught up in family games through coalitions or alliances.
- 2. tending to move outward or away from the center; within a family, forces that push the members apart, especially when the family organization lacks cohesiveness, so they seek gratification outside of rather than within the family
- 3. The FACES scale measures flexibility, ______, and communication
- 5. the year of the research article
- 6. in the narrative approach, helping families view the problem or symptom as occurring outside of themselves in an effort to mobilize them to fight to overcome it
- 8. the issue number of the research article
- 9. This view believes that reality it constructed from language and conversation.
- 12. symbolic ceremonial prescriptions offered by a therapist intended to address family conflict over its covert rules to be enacted by the family in order to provide clarity or insight into their roles and relationships
- 13. The study (research) of the interaction between the patient and therapist systems. This attempts to reveal how therapy works and their contributing factors
- 16. covert alliances or affiliations, temporary or long term, between certain family members against other members in the family
- 21. The research article is from which journal?
- 24. These types of therapists observe triads, hierarchies, and patterns that maintain symptoms
- 25. the volume number of the research article
- 26. tending to move toward the center within a family, forces that pull a family closer together so the family seeks fulfillment from within the family
- 28. Primary author of the research article
- 29. Narrative therapists help families ______ their problems
- 30. The _____ view point rejects the idea that there is a deep structure to all phenomenon and its complexity can be broken down to elements.
- 31. These types of therapists evaluate levels of differentiation
Down
- 1. What year did cognitive therapy emerge?
- 4. This type of therapy tries to shift the family organization so that the presenting problem or symptom no longer serves its previous function in the family. Change occurs not through insight and understanding but through the process of the family carrying out directives issued by the therapist. It is less focused on the meaning of symptoms or its origins.
- 7. These types of therapists focus on boundaries and transactional patterns
- 10. The Family adaptability and cohesion evaluation scale is used in what model?
- 11. An interviewing technique first formulated by Milan systemic therapists aimed at eliciting differences in perception about events or relationships from different family members. Particularly regarding points in the family life cycle when significant coalition shifts and adaptations have occurred.
- 14. most widely used measure in research
- 15. This therapy emphasizes that the solutions people use to alleviate the problem often is sustaining the problem or making it worse.
- 17. These types of therapists are interested in how their client views the world
- 18. family is viewed as an evolving system that is continuing to use an old epistemology that no longer fits its current behavior patterns. The therapist indirectly introduces new information to encourage change.
- 19. The therapeutic tactic of entering a family system by engaging its separate members and subsystems gaining access in order to explore and ultimately help modify dysfunctional aspects of that system
- 20. These models reject the idea that there is an objective truth observable to all
- 22. These types of therapists believe clients can be helped to change by constructing alternative stories about their lives.
- 23. This type of therapy is designed to bright about cognitive and behavioral changes in individuals and families
- 27. the communication concept that each participant in a transaction believes whatever he or she says is caused by what the other says, in effect holding the other person responsible for his/her actions.
