Across
- 7. superficial behavioral changes within a system that do not change the structure of the system itself Ch. 11
- 9. Covert alliances or affiliations, temporary or long-term, between certain family members against others in the family.
- 11. 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.
- 12. 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 occurred.
- 15. One of the pioneers of Strategic Therapy
- 16. a variety of paradoxical techniques used to change entrenched family patterns for example, prescribing the symptom or relabeling Ch. 11
- 17. 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
- 19. A Milan-model therapeutic approach in which the family, as an evolving system, is viewed as continuing to use an old epistemology that no longer fits its current behavior patterns; the therapist indirectly introduces new information into the family system and encourages alternative epistemologies to develop.
- 20. Circular question, neutrality, MRI techniques, and double binds are used to treat this.
Down
- 1. Tending to move outward or away from the center' within a family, forces that push the members apart, especial when the family organization lacks cohesiveness so that they seek gratification outside of rather than within the family
- 2. require a fundamental revision of the system's structure and function to remove the symptom Ch. 11
- 3. This type of therapy is less focused on the meaning of the symptoms and it's origins, and the therapist issues a series of directives or tasks to the family
- 4. 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.
- 5. In systemic family therapy, placing the family in a therapeutic double bind in order to counter the members' paradoxical interactions
- 6. Tending to move toward the center; within a family forces that bind or otherwise keep the members together so that they seek fulfillment from interfamilial rather that outside relationships
- 8. In this form of therapy, the thrust of the intervention is to shift the family organization so that the presenting symptom no longer serves s previous function in the family. Ch. 11
- 10. belief that what one says is caused by what the other person says Ch 11
- 13. As 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.
- 14. This model is directed at understanding how families deal with stresses and demands throughout the life cycle. It is based on the family's flexibility, cohesion, and communication. Measured by the FACE scale.
- 18. ______ Gerald Patterson, and Robert Liberman were all pioneers in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
- 19. According to Haley, a _____ is a strategy that is adaptive to current social situation for controlling a relationship when all other strategies have failed.
