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Theory. A model that counselors use as a guide to hypothesize about the formation of possible solutions to a problemCounselors decide which theory to use on the basis of their educational backgroud, philosophy, and needs of clients. Theory. Hansen, Stevic and Warner five requirements of a good the
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1. Chapter Nine Psychoanalytic, Adlerian, and Humanistic Theories of Counseling
2. Theory A model that counselors use as a guide to hypothesize about the formation of possible solutions to a problem
Counselors decide which theory to use on the basis of their educational backgroud, philosophy, and needs of clients
3. Theory Hansen, Stevic and Warner five requirements of a good theory
Clear, easily understood, and communicable
Comprehensive
Explicit and heuristic
Specific in relating means to desired outcomes
Useful to its intended practitioners
4. Importance of Theory Theory impacts
How communication is conceptualized, how interpersonal relationships develop, how professional ethics are implemented, how counselors view themselves as professionals
5. Six Functions of Theory Helps counselors find unity and relatedness within the diversity of existence
Compels counselors to examine relationships they would otherwise overlook
Gives counselors operational guidelines by which to work and helps them evaluate their development as professionals
6. Six Functions of Theory 4. Helps counselors focus on relevant data and tells them what to look for
5. Helps counselors assist clients in the effective modification for their behavior
6. Helps counselors evaluate both old and new approaches to the process of counseling
7. Psychoanalytic Theories Sigmund Freud (1856 – 1939)
A Viennese physician, developed psychoanalysis, a therapeutic approach aimed at giving patients insight into unconscious emotional conflicts
8. View of Human Nature Dynamic
Conscious mind, preconscious, unconscious
Use of defense mechanisms to copy with anxiety, on the unconscious level
9. Psychoanalytic Stages of Development Oral Stage birth – 12-18 months- babies chief source of pleasure is mouth oriented activities, such as sucking and feeding
Fixation-oral passive- dependent on others, oral gratification such as smoking, drinking; oral aggressive- bite things, verbally aggressive, sarcastic
Anal Stage 12-18 months- 3 years- chief source of pleasure around anal region, toilet training
Fixation-anal expulsive- sloppy, disorganized, cruel and destructive; anal retentive- clean, very stubborn, tight in all ways
10. Psychoanalytic Stages of Development Phallic 3-6 years – child becomes attached to parent of the other sex and later identifies with same sex parent (Oedipus and Electra complex)
Fixation- difficulties in superego formation, sex role identity and sexuality
11. Psychoanalytic Stages of Development Latency 6-12 years – Time of relative calm, sexual instinct largely dormant and sublimated in school activity, they become socialized, develop skills, and learn more about themselves and society
Genital 12 yrs through adulthood – Reemergence of sexual impulses of phallic stage, channeled into mature adult sexuality towards the opposite sex
12. Three parts to personality: Id: Pleasure Principle--demands immediate satisfaction, unconscious, born with id , infancy
Ego: Reality Principle--can delay gratification, mental health requires a strong ego, develops during the first year of life
Superego: development of conscience, moral or ethical province, ruled by the idealistic principle, develops at age 5 or 6
13. Psychoanalytic Theories Role of counselor – expert, talk using free association, working through unresolved issues, interprets for client
Goals – become aware of unconscious aspects of personality, work through unresolved developmental stages, strengthening ego to help client cope
14. Psychoanalytic Techniques Free Association
Dream Analysis
Analysis of Transference
Analysis of Resistance
Interpretation
15. Psychoanalytic Theories Strengths- importance of sexuality and unconscious mind on behavior, empirical studies conducted, support for diagnostic instruments, stresses developmental stage growth
Effective with clients with hysteria, narcissism, obsessive-compulsive reactions, character disorders, anxiety, phobias and sexual difficulties
16. Psychoanalytic Theories Limitations – time consuming and expensive, does not work well majority of clients, training limited to individuals with medical degrees, concepts not easily understood, deterministic, for individuals with major adjustment problems
17. Adlerian Theory Founders – Alfred Adler (1870-1937) founder, also known as Individual Psychology, Rudolph Driekurs and others helped to revitalize Individual psychology after Adler’s death
18. Adlerian Theory – View of Human Nature Motivated by social interest, being connected to society as a whole
Conscious aspects of behavior central to development of personality
People strive for perfection, inferiority complex, superiority complex
19. Adlerian Theory – View of Human Nature Emphasis on birth order, family constellation
Style of life developed by age 5
Main tasks – society, work, sexuality
20. Adlerian Theory – Role of the Counselor Diagnosticians, teachers, and models of equalitarian relationships
Uses family constellation, earliest memories, dreams
Client encouraged to change faulty lifestyle
Counselor active, assigns homework
21. Adlerian Theory - Goals Help client to develop healthy and holistic lifestyles
Faulty lifestyle is self centered and based on mistaken goals, incorrect assumptions and feelings of inferiority
Client ultimately decides to choose social interest or self interests
22. Adlerian Theory - Technqiues Counselors are warm, supportive, empathic, collaborative relationship
Counselor analyzes client’s lifestyle through family constellation, early memories, dreams and priorities
Counselor helps client develop insight with open ended questions
23. Adlerian Theory - Techniques Asking the question
Acting as if
Spitting in the client’s soup
Task setting
Push button
24. Adlerian Theory - Strengths Counselor encouragment and support
Versitle over life span
Useful in treating conduct disorders, antisocial disorders, anxiety disorders, some affective disorders, and personality disorders
Used in different cultural contexts
25. Adlerian Theory - Limitations Lacks a research base
Vague in terms
Too optimistic about human nature
Relies heavily on verbal, logic and insight YAVIS clients
26. Humanistic Theories Counseling, focuses on the potential of individuals to actively choose and purposely decide
Counselors help individuals to increase self-understanding through their feelings
Person centered, Existential, Gestalt
27. Person Centered Counseling Founder – Carl Rogers (1902-1987) , theory described in 1942 book Counseling and Psychotherapy
28. Person Centered- View of Human Nature People are essentially good, aware, inner directed, realistic, trustworthy
Person is capable of finding a personal meaning and purpose in life; moving towards self actualization
Phenomenological perspective
29. Person Centered – View of Human Nature Positive regard
Conditional regard
Ideal self and real self
30. Person Centered – Role of the Counselor Counselor’s role is holistic
Promotes a climate in which the client is free and encouraged to explore self
Counselor reflects client’s feelings, facilitator, patience
Counselor is process expert, and expert learner of client
31. Person Centered - Goals client need assistance to learn how to cope with situations, focus on person
client to become fully functioning
Client is helped to identify, use and integrate his own resources and potential
32. Person Centered - Techniques Quality of relationship more important
Empathy, Positive Regard, Congruence
Active and passive listening, accurate reflection of thoughts and feelings, clarification, summarization, confrontation, open ended leads
33. Person Centered - Strengths Applicable to a wide range of human problems
Research supported
Effective
Open relationship
Positive view of human nature
34. Person Centered - Limitations Few instructions on how to establish relationship
YAVIS clients needed
Ignores diagnosis
Deals with surface issues
35. Existential Counseling Founders – Rollo May and Viktor Frankl
View of Human Nature- people form lives by choices they make
Focus on freedom of choice, people as authors of their lives
36. Existential Counseling- View of Human Nature Meaning of life – ultimate meanings, meaning of the moment, day to day meaning
Discover life’s meaning by doing a deed, by experiencing a value, or by suffering
Psychopathology is failure to make meaningful choices, anxiety can be healthy
37. Existential Counseling – Role of the Counselor Counselors are authentic, enter deep and personal relationships
Focus on person to person relationship
Serve as a model to client, help client gain self understanding
Focus on living in the present, ultimate human concerns
38. Existential Counseling Goals – helping clients realize importance of meaning, responsibility, awareness, freedom and potential
Client is freed from observing events and becomes a shaper of meaningful personal activity
39. Existential Counseling - Techniques Fewer techniques- allow counselors to borrow from others
Relationship with client
Counselor is open, authenticity, honesty, spontaneity
Use confrontation
40. Existential Counseling - Strengths Uniqueness of each individual
Anxiety viewed as healthy
Philosophical approach
Stress human growth, connect individuals to universal problems
Combined with other perspectives
41. Existential Counseling - Limitations Not a fully developed model of counseling
Lacks educational and training programs
Difficult to implement beyond individual level, lacks uniformity
Closer to existential philosophy
42. Gestalt Therapy Founders- Frederick (Fritz) Perls, Laura Perls and Paul Goodman helped to define more
Gestalt psychology- perception of completeness and wholeness, gestalt means whole figure
43. Gestalt Therapy – View of Human Nature Human beings work for wholeness and completeness in life
Self actualizing tendency emerges through interaction in environment, present focus
Each person tries to integrate self into healthy, unified whole
44. Gestalt Therapy – View of Human Nature Overdependence on intellectual experience, inablity to resolve unfinished business, causes problems
Focus on awareness, experiencing the now
Client may lose contact with environment, overinvolved, unfinished business, become fragmented, conflict between top dog and underdog, difficulty with dichotomies of life
45. Gestalt Therapy – Role of the Counselor Create atmosphere that promotes growth
Counselor is intensely and personally involved
Exciting, energetic, fully human
46. Gestalt Therapy - Goals Emphasis on here and now, recognition of the immediacy of experience
Focus on verbal and nonverbal
Help resolve past to be integrated
Completion of mentally growing up
Emphasis action
Now=experience=awareness=reality
47. Gestalt Therapy - Techniques Excercises- enactment of fantasies, role playing, psychodrama, dream work, empty chair, confrontation – what and how, making the rounds, I take responsibility, Exaggeration, May I feed you a sentence
Experiments- not planned, grow out of interaction with counselor
48. Gestalt Therapy - Strengths Helps client incorporate and accept all aspects of life
Resolve unfinished business
Focus on doing rather than talking
Flexible
Appropriate for affective disorders, anxiety states, somatoform, adjustments
49. Gestalt Therapy - Limitations Lacks theoretical base
Deals only with here and now
Little use of diagnosis and testing
Focus totally on individual self centeredness