+1 (951) 902-6107 info@platinumressays.com

 

: Review lecture material

Step 2: Complete Discussion Board thread – Motivation toward Helping Careers

Step 3: Respond to two classmates’ threads

PSY350 Careers in

Psychology

A Career in Counseling, Marriage and Family

Therapy, or Social Work

Master Level Clinicians

• Most Master Level (MS, MA, or MEd) will work in

one of three areas:

• Counseling

• Marriage and Family Therapy

• Clinical Social Work

Master Level Clinicians

• All three professions specialize in the use of

psychotherapy and/or counseling techniques to bring

about change in their clients.

• Their techniques and career pathways, however,

differ.

Marriage and Family Therapists

Marriage and Family Therapists (MFT’s) usually conceptualize families

and couples from a systems perspective:

A person is himself or herself in the context of relationships. The

usual focus on a person’s feelings, thoughts, and internal struggles

will not reveal the relationship forces that create distress or health

A relationship is governed by feedback, or circular causality, in

which each person continually responds to the other in predictable

ways that sustain patterns of interacting in the system.

Schools of Family Therapy

• Bowen

• studied schizophrenic families — mother child fusion

• three-generation model, genogram

• fusion and differentiation

• triangulation

School of Family Therapy, cont.

• Structural — Minuchin • boundaries

• hiercharchies

• enactments

• more collaborative than Strategic — teaching and coaching

• presenting problem may mask more important issues, esp. marital

School of Family Therapy, cont.

• Human Validation Process — Satir

• nurturing

• family sculpting, parts party, concrete symbols, touching

• focused on teaching direct communication

NOTE: These are just a sample of therapies. Most therapists ascribe

to one and conceptualize their cases through these models.

Families in Distress

All families face two types of stressors

Developmental stressors

Environmental stressors

Families in distress are not sick, but have been unable to adjust

to the stressors

Developmental Stressors

marriage

1st child

1st teenager

gender role changes

death of parent

children leave home

Environmental Stressors

fire

injury

war

new job or job loss

economic recession

storm losses

Why Families Enter

Therapy

• Stressors -arise in the normal course of a family’s life.

• The failure of its members to accommodate to stressors leads members to disengage from some members, and become enmeshed with others

A Distressed Family

Is often unwilling to take responsibility

Interprets problems from a linear causality perspective, rather

than a circular perspective.

Suffers a confusion of levels (children and parents)

Forms coalitions (a parent and a child against another parent)

Appoints children to quasi-adult roles (a child taking on the role

of one parent’s confidant)

A Step-by-Step Approach to Marriage &

Family Therapy — the Initial phase

• 1) Inviting entire family to session

• 2) Joining and building a collaborative relationship

• 3) Assessing problem from multiple perspectives

• 4) Assessing family rules, values, language patterns, and

goals (teleological lens)

• 5) Assessing cultural issues (multicultural lens), and family

of origin for patterns across the generations (developmental

lens) — genogram

A Step-by-Step Approach to Marriage &

Family Therapy –Interventions

• 6) Observing, or tracking interactional patterns — asking process

questions (Bowen)

• educates the family about circular causality

• I-position encourages taking responsibility and ending of blame

• 7) Observing and encouraging typical dynamics — enactments

(Minuchin). Therapist may use

• Reframing, “stroke and a kick”

• Assigning tasks

• boundary adjustments

• eliciting and supporting competencies

Classic Problems Example:

Infidelity

Can be due to lifelong suppression of one’s needs in the context of a

marital relationship

Usually occurs during major developmental or environmental stressors,

which disrupt communication and intimacy between spouses

Can be due to lack of intimacy due to family pressures

Interventions–Affairs

Establish that it takes two for an affair to happen.

Need to communicate unspoken needs

perhaps too much difference or “complementarity”

perhaps not enough “similarity,” and quality time

explore unexpressed dreams

Tools for All Seasons

Focus on process (how) rather than content (what)

Focus on interpersonal dynamics, rather than personal feelings and

thoughts

Focus on here and now, vs. there and then

Tools for All Seasons

Teach Circular Causality/Reciprocity

Ask “process questions” that encourage linking one’s own behavior to

the effects on others, example: “What effect does it have on her when

you withdraw and watch TV?” or “Have you tried to talk with him

about it rather than giving him the silent treatment?”

Encouraging I-position, not talking about others

Explore cross-generational patterns

Tools for All Seasons

De-triangulating

Getting people to talk directly without interruptions

Role playing direct communication

Having everyone present for meeting

Acknowledging competencies and putting them to work

Reframing — “Stroke and Kick” — Reframe and redirect

Genograms for cross-generational patterns

What is Social Work?

• “…the professional activity of helping individuals,

groups, families, organizations, and communities…”

• TO DO WHAT?

• Enhance or restore their quality of life

OK, but what do Social Workers

Actually do?

• Social Workers have many roles:

• Counselors

• Educators

• Mediators

• Administrators

• Advocates/ Political consultants

• Researchers

Other Related Mental Health Professions (and

Differences)

• Social Work

• Emphasis on social/community conditions

• Different settings than clinical psychologists (especially community agencies)

• Social conditions that facilitate optimal development

• Program planning and management

• Diversity of settings

• Many function as part of mental-health team

Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.

Social Work (cont-d)

• Case-workers and coordinators of services

• Help patients navigate in a maze of mental-health

services

• Need to have either a BSW or MSW and supervise

training progarm

Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.

Where Do Social Workers Work?

• There are many social work settings:

• Schools

• Hospitals

• Probation/Corrections Departments

• Mental Health Clinics

• Alcoholism/Drug Facilities

• Nursing Homes

• Group Homes

Example: Mental Health

Professional social workers are the nation’s largest

group of mental health services providers. There are

more clinically trained social workers than

psychiatrists, psychologists, and psychiatric nurses

combined. (NASW, 2005)

FOR MORE INFO…

National Association of Social Workers www.naswdc.org

Mental Health, Roles

• As a social worker, you might:

• Run a group (therapy, socialization, educational)

• Do individual counseling

• Work with families who struggle with various problems (domestic violence, child abuse)

• Counsel children or teens

• Help alcoholics or drug addicts to deal with their addictions

• Attend team meetings on treatment planning for patients in mental hospital settings

What Makes Social Work Unique?

Person-in-environment perspective.

Social workers see people as being connected to a larger

social world. This might include family, school community

or peer groups.

Strengths perspective.

Social workers assume that everyone has strengths, and that

there are strengths in the resources around us. They help

people to find and utilize these areas of strength.

Platinum Essays