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Psychotherapy Fundamentals and Theories

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Title: Psychotherapy Fundamentals and Theories


1
Psychotherapy Fundamentals and Theories
  • PSY 340 Section 2

2
Course Section 2 Goals
  • Knowledge of basic counseling fundamentals
  • Overview of the major psychological theories
  • Main theorists, therapeutic goals, strategies,
    and beliefs of psychopathology
  • Gain an appreciation of the variety and overlap
    of theories
  • Begin to discover and formulate your own ideas
    about your theorectical orientation

3
Counseling Fundamentals
  • Characteristics of counselors
  • Therapeutic relationship
  • 3 stage model of therapy
  • Basic techniques and skills

4
Characteristics of Counselors
  • Friend vs. Counselor
  • Alliance with focus on the client
  • Power issues
  • Qualities of a counselor (Burger Youkeles,
    2000)
  • Good listener
  • Effective communicator
  • Empathic
  • Open
  • Supportive
  • Accepting

5
Characteristics of Counselors (cont)
  • Counselors need to
  • Be aware of self and impact on others
  • Be open-minded and culturally sensitive
  • Have a sense of ethics and professional
    responsibility
  • Set good personal and professional boundaries
  • Self-care and seek help when needed

6
Therapeutic Relationship
  • Consider therapist and client characteristics
  • Self as a tool
  • Bring to counseling values, experiences, beliefs,
    personality
  • Client characteristics
  • Readiness for change
  • Expectations
  • Self-awareness
  • Cultural background and experiences

7
3 aspects of the therapeutic relationship (Gelso
Carter, 1994)
  • Working Alliance
  • Collaboration towards goals
  • Transference Configuration
  • Clients and therapists repetition of past
    conflicts/relationships with significant others
  • Real Relationship
  • Genuine, realistic part of the relationship

8
Three-Stage Model (Hill OBrien, 1999)
  • Exploration, Insight, and Action
  • Exploration
  • Clients explore thoughts, feelings, and actions
  • Establish rapport, clients share and explore
    feelings, learn clients perspective
  • Skills/ techniques used
  • Listen/ awareness of verbal and non-verbal
  • Restate and reflect content to demonstrate
    understanding
  • Ask questions to facilitate exploration

9
Three-Stage Model (cont)
  • Insight
  • Understanding thoughts, feelings, and actions
    see things in a new light
  • Create new insight and understanding of clients
    role in their thoughts, feelings, and actions
  • Use the therapeutic relationship as tool
  • Additional Skills/ Techniques
  • Challenge clients perspective
  • Construct/ reframe experience
  • Provide feedback, including in-session experience

10
Three-Stage Model (cont)
  • Action
  • Facilitate action/choices on the basis of the
    exploration and insight stages
  • Explore new behaviors, decide actions, facilitate
    needed skills, provide feedback, process feelings
    about change
  • Additional Skills/ Techniques
  • Assess current behaviors
  • Teach new behaviors
  • Reinforce changes
  • Set and modify action plans

11
Progression of therapy
  • Relationship building
  • Information sharing and assessment of presenting
    concerns
  • Narrow focus and set goals
  • Explorefacilitate insight implement changes
  • Evaluate progress and consolidate skills to
    future application
  • Termination and maintenance

12
Relationship Building
  • Be yourself!!
  • Be aware of client and respond
  • Expectations, concerns, uncertainties
  • Provide core conditions
  • Empathic understanding
  • Unconditional positive regard
  • Genuineness
  • Congruence with thought/feelings and behaviors
  • Never underestimate the power of listening and
    respect!

13
Techniques and Interventions
  • With each intervention consider
  • Therapeutic goals and conceptualization
  • Your intent
  • Specific action
  • Anticipated response
  • Evaluation
  • Client conceptualization
  • Treat each intervention as a hypothesis test

14
Techniques and Interventions
  • Active listening
  • Verbal and nonverbal behavior
  • Hearing vs. Listening
  • Minimal Encouragers
  • Small phrases, repetition single word
  • Uh-hmm scared
  • Silence
  • Allows reflection
  • Encourages client taking direction

15
Techniques and Interventions
  • Open vs. Closed questions
  • How do you feel? open
  • Requires elaboration
  • Do you feel sad? closed
  • Can be answered yes or no
  • Paraphrase
  • Repeating what is said in different words
  • Reflection of feelings
  • Attention given to affect
  • Highlighting the feeling underlying what is said
    or renaming the feeling

16
Techniques and Interventions
  • Interpretation
  • Giving insight or new view of event
  • Confrontation
  • Attending to discrepancies in clients thoughts,
    feeling, and/or behaviors
  • Self-disclosure
  • Providing relevant personal information

17
Fundamentals Wrap Up!
  • Know yourself and be aware of your impact
  • You are a tool
  • The relationship is central base to build on
  • Even natural skills take time and practice
  • Everything is process, learning occurs for all
    involved at all stages
  • All interactions are purposeful and provide
    knowledge

18
Fundamentals In relationship to theories
  • Basic skills are applied in all theories
  • Building blocks of therapy
  • Specific techniques or focuses are unique to some
    theories
  • Theories may change the look of some basic
    skills depending on the emphasis of the theory

19
Overview of Theories
  • Psychodynamic
  • Person-Centered
  • Gestalt
  • Behavioral Approaches
  • Cognitive Approaches

20
Overview of Psychodynamic Theories
  • Psychoanalysis
  • Sigmund Freud
  • Neo-Freudians
  • Alfred Adler, individual psychology
  • Carl Jung,
  • Others (Horney, Sullivan)
  • Object Relations
  • Mahler Separation and Individuation
  • Self-Psychology
  • Kohut

21
Sigmund Freud Theory of Personality
  • Emphasized internal drives/ energy
  • Sexual and aggression
  • Dynamic interaction of 3 personality aspects (Id,
    Ego, Superego)
  • Importance of unconscious, hidden meanings
  • Developmental stages and conflicts
  • Role of defense mechanisms

22
Three components of personality
  • Id
  • I want, primitive impulses
  • Self-focused without considering others
  • No sense of reality
  • All Id at birth
  • Ego
  • Mediates ID Superego controls/regulates
    impulses
  • Concept of reality
  • Superego
  • Conscience (introjected parental values)
  • Perfectionist standards of good person

23
Stages of Personality Development
  • Oral (birth 1.5/2 yrs)
  • Mouth primary erogenous zone
  • Ego begins to develop
  • Anal (1.5/2 3 yrs)
  • Anus primary erogenous zone
  • Gratification controlling bowels, defecation
  • Issue of socialization
  • Anal retentive personality

24
Stages of Personality Development (cont)
  • Phallic (4 6 yrs)
  • Genitals primary erogenous zone
  • Oedipal complex
  • Superego develops
  • Latency (6 adolescence)
  • Regulating represses impulses from Oedipal
    complex
  • Preoccupation with rules and establishing order
  • Genital (adolescence beyond)
  • Redirected energy towards peers

25
Defense Mechanisms
  • Denial
  • Refusal to recognize real nature of ones
    behavior
  • Rationalization
  • Giving acceptable reason for behavior to hide
    real motive
  • Projection
  • Attributing ones unacceptable wishes, aims, and
    motives on other people

26
Defense Mechanisms (cont)
  • Displacement
  • Deflect feelings onto a less threatening target
  • Reaction Formation
  • Acting in a way that is opposite to how you want
    to act
  • Intellectualization
  • To avoid them, repressed impulses are allowed
    into conciousness in an intellectual way
  • Compensation
  • Dealing with frustration in one area by investing
    in another area

27
Beliefs about Psychopathology Anxiety
  • Psychopathology is seen when defense mechanisms
    break down
  • Event intensifies unconscious conflicts
  • Symptoms have hidden meaning
  • Emotional conflict
  • Repression
  • Events excluded because painful
  • Symptoms alleviated with awareness

28
Therapeutic Tools and Techniques
  • Free Association
  • Say what ever comes to mind unrestricted
  • Therapist sits behind and acts a blank screen
  • psychic determinism- nothing happens by chance
  • Interpretations and insight
  • Major therapeutic tool
  • Goal to increase insight
  • Importance of timing
  • Related affect needs to be present

29
Therapeutic Tools and Techniques (cont)
  • Transference
  • People transfer feelings from past onto present
    situations/ people
  • Therapists acts as blank screen
  • Use transference therapeutically, here and now
  • Counter-transference
  • Therapists feelings toward client
  • Clues used therapeutically
  • Process here and now

30
Goals of Psychoanalysis
  • Uncover repressed emotions
  • Awareness alleviates problems
  • Gain insight of hidden meanings of behavior
  • Overcome resistance to therapy

31
Research and Evaluation
  • Research
  • No evidence that longterm is better
  • Difficulty to research repression
  • Controversy of repressed memories of abuse
  • No empirical evidence supporting Oedipal Complex
  • Personality is not fixed

32
Research and Evaluation (cont)
  • Criticisms of Psychoanalysis
  • Difficulty is studying concepts
  • Sexual and aggression drives to narrow
  • Led to Jungs break away from Freud
  • Sexist
  • Focused on Hysterical women
  • Time frame of treatment outlined to long
  • Focus on psychopathology

33
Contributions of Psychoanalysis
  • Major theory of personality and of treatment
  • Emphasis on early childhood events
  • Unconscious component of problems
  • Importance of awareness and working with affect
    in session
  • Therapeutic use of the relationship
  • Transference, countertransference

34
Neo-Freudians
  • Alfred Adler, Carl Jung, Karen Horney, Henry
    Stack Sullivan
  • Disagreed with emphasis on sexual aggression
    drives
  • Focused more on relationships
  • Set the stage for modern perspectives
  • Object Relations
  • Self-Psychology

35
Alfred Alder (1929-1964)
  • Rejected emphasis on sexual and aggression
    drives
  • Personality as unified
  • Focused on conscious personality aspects
  • Striving for superiority motivating force
  • Inferiority Complex
  • Created a personality typology

36
Carl Jung (1933-1956)
  • Analytic psychology
  • More emphasis on dreams
  • Unconscious 2 parts
  • Personal
  • Collective unconscious (archetypes)
  • Personality Typology
  • Extraversion-Introversion
  • Thinking, feeling, sensing, intuiting

37
Object Relations
  • Developed in response to disagreement with Freud
    s emphasis on drives
  • Central emphasis on relationships, connectedness
  • object person
  • Internal representations of people, early
    relationships
  • Theorists
  • Mahler Separation-Individuation, splitting

38
Self-Psychology
  • Concerned with development of the self
  • Self-object person who serves a function to
    developing self
  • Core sense of self at 2-years
  • Needs of children
  • Fulfilled by caretaker
  • Support, empathy, and appreciation
  • All-powerful parental figures to protect and
    provide strength
  • Children need to learn to take care of self, self
    soothe

39
Summary of Psychoanalytic Approaches
  • Physic determinism behaviors/ reactions caused
    intrapsychic factors
  • Emphasis/ importance early childhood
  • Unconscious processes, defenses,
    repetition/transference
  • Importance of therapy relationship
  • Insight is key in behavior changes

40
Overview of Theories
  • Psychodynamic
  • Person-Centered
  • Gestalt / Existential
  • Behavioral Approaches
  • Cognitive Approaches

41
Humanistic Approaches
  • Person-Centered, Gestalt, Existential
  • Reaction to Freud
  • People can make choices and effect change
  • Person in control of their life
  • Create own meaning, identity, and life
  • Positive, holistic view of the person
  • Worth and dignity each person
  • Right own opinions, individual choice
  • Natural tendency towards growth/ actualization
  • Person always changing, river metaphor

42
Person-Centered Therapy
  • Carl Rogers originated it in 1940s
  • Book Counseling and Psychotherapy
  • Detailed non-directive therapy
  • Need for empathy and safe environment
  • Client knows best, client autonomy
  • Emphasis on affect
  • Helped to merge counseling and psychotherapy
  • Change from Client to Person-Centered
  • Applied to all settings

43
Overview of Person-Centered Theories
  • Respect and facilitate natural growth process
  • Many possible realities, subjective
  • Positive growth results from respecting ones
    reality and providing basic trust
  • No advice giving or judgments
  • No labels or treatment plans

44
Beliefs about Psychopathology
  • Occurs when not genuine and unable to listen to
    the self, needs, and experiences
  • Lose ability to trust self, organismic valuing
    process
  • Results in inability to grow and change
  • When personal constructs are rigid
  • Move away from shoulds that block natural
    knowing of needs
  • Treat personal constructs as hypotheses
  • Remember wouldnt call it psychopathology!!
  • Doesnt label or diagnose

45
Therapeutic Tools and Techniques
  • Unconditional positive regard
  • Environment of non-judgment, acceptance,
    understanding
  • Care for client regardless of choices/ actions
  • Accept autonomy and clients desires
  • Genuineness
  • Honest and authentic with feelings and responses
  • Self-disclosure

46
Therapeutic Tools and Techniques (cont)
  • Empathy
  • See clients worldview, reality, and convey
    understanding
  • Acceptance
  • Acceptance of feelings, persons reality
  • Different from agreement
  • Other skills used
  • Silence, restatement, reflection
  • Encourage self exploration
  • Avoid challenges and interpretations

47
Goals of Person-Centered Therapies
  • Adapt non-judgmental, self-accepting attitude
    toward self
  • Increase ability to listen to experience and
    personal needs
  • Empowerment of the client

48
Role of the therapist
  • Provide non-judgmental environment to facilitate
    natural growth
  • natural process of client self-regulation and
    evolution
  • Two elements of therapy
  • Client listen and accept experience, leading to
    more flexibility
  • Focus on own resources to empower the client
    currently and in the future

49
Research and Evaluation
  • Most widely researched of the Humanistic
    approaches
  • Smith,Glass, Miller (1980)
  • As effective as other approaches
  • Generated considerable research on core
    conditions, therapeutic relationship
  • Support for the core conditions
  • Mixed findings if sufficient

50
Contributions of Person-Centered Therapies
  • Importance of core therapeutic conditions
  • Aspects often cited as fundamental skills
  • Emphasis on empathy
  • Focus on the client, client direction
  • Self-healing potential
  • Clear description of helping relationship
  • Generated research

51
Overview of Theories
  • Psychodynamic
  • Person-Centered
  • Gestalt / Existential
  • Behavioral Approaches
  • Cognitive Approaches

52
Overview of Gestalt Theory
  • Fritz Perls, founder
  • Client experience, choice, responsibility
  • Gestalt - German
  • whole, shape, or form
  • Whole is greater than sum of parts
  • People function as a whole
  • Emotion can be expressed as physiological
  • Field theory- look at all aspects
  • Field, or background gives meaning
  • Meaning from experiences

53
Overview of Gestalt Theory (cont)
  • Hunger drives vs. sex /aggression
  • Hunger to take in experiences, grow, awareness
    of needs
  • Growth (need-satisfaction) Process
  • Awareness - internal/ external experience
  • Excitement - reaction, involvement with situation
  • Action - tendency towards contact
  • Contact - w/ all aspects of present situation
  • attention not fixed or blocked on one aspect
  • Results in need satisfaction

54
Beliefs about Psychopathology
  • Strive for balance, growth, awareness of needs
  • Whole disrupted when imbalanced
  • Neurosis results from interruption of growth
    (need-satisfaction) process
  • Defenses
  • Split between should vs. wants
  • In sum
  • Pathology occurs when awareness of needs and
    feelings are blocked

55
Therapeutic Tools and Techniques
  • Focus on
  • Feelings, body awareness
  • Here and now - direct experience
  • Active experiments/ awareness exercises- to get
    in touch with feelings
  • Role playing
  • Two-chair
  • I take responsibility

56
Goals of Gestalt Therapies
  • Client to discover truth through inner
    experience, foster growth
  • Maintain full, open contact
  • Awareness of self as growing/ changing
  • Identify/discriminate feelings and needs
  • Awareness of polarities and work towards
    unification
  • Empowerment to make decisions
  • Self-sufficiency / independence

57
Role of the therapist
  • No interpretation, client must discover
  • Heighten awareness, intensify experience
  • Recognizes defenses
  • Awareness of needs and feelings
  • Works towards creating balance between
    polarities, encourage growth
  • Move toward authentic behavior/ balance
  • More directive, leads and follows
  • Use of experiments
  • Attending to inner experience, non-verbals
  • Use of confrontation to point out discrepancies

58
Research and Evaluation
  • Gestalt therapy is as effective as other
    therapies (Smith, Glass, Miller, 1980)
  • Empty chair technique effective with anger and
    conflicting feelings
  • To much focus on individual needs and
    independence
  • Now softer approach, more interdependent

59
Contributions of Gestalt Therapies
  • Balance between client and therapist action
  • Client in charge, but therapist more active
  • Formation of experiential techniques
  • Help client understand self better
  • Focus on the total being
  • all experiences
  • Importance of background
  • Emphasis on creation of meaning

60
Similarities to Person-Centered Therapy
  • Both
  • Positive view of humans
  • Natural movement towards actualization
  • Problems arise when growth is blocked
  • Gestalt
  • Therapist more active
  • More focus on needs and independence

61
Existential Theories
  • Victor Frankl, Rollo May, Yalom
  • More of a point of view on therapy
  • Emphasis on choices
  • People create own meaning and identity
  • Choices led to anxiety, people avoid
  • Reality of finality, death
  • Limits as restricting freedom vs. giving meaning
    to choice

62
Existential Theories (cont)
  • ultimate concerns
  • Death
  • Freedom
  • Isolation
  • Meaninglessness
  • Defense mechanisms - block authentic choices
  • Repression
  • Distortion
  • Avoidance

63
Awareness of ultimate concerns Anxiety
Acceptance Defenses (repression, distortion,
avoidance) Authenticity
64
Goals Existential Therapy
  • Awareness of goals in life and making authentic
    choices
  • Confront self, and face what avoiding
  • Awareness and acceptance of anxiety
  • Expand awareness
  • Aware of denied potential
  • Means of denial
  • Reality of choice
  • Resulting Anxiety

65
Summary of Humanistic Theories
  • Person Centered, Gestalt, Existential
  • Phenomenological approach- client is expert of
    own experience
  • Actualizing tendency towards growth
  • Emphasis on self-determination and choice
  • Importance of the relationship

66
Overview of Theories
  • Psychodynamic
  • Person-Centered
  • Gestalt / Existential
  • Behavioral Approaches
  • Cognitive Approaches

67
Overview of Behavioral Approaches
  • Not one person credited with behavioral theory
  • Based on learning theory
  • Pavlov - Classical Conditioning
  • B. F. Skinner - Operant Conditioning
  • Social learning theory, modeling

68
Overview (cont)
  • Behavior is learned
  • Change behavior by new learning
  • Personality is the product of accumulated
    learning
  • Function of heredity and environment
  • Behavior function of what learned from
    environment
  • Focus on learning theory, not personality

69
Beliefs about Psychopathology
  • Learned behaviors that can be understood when
    look at learning history
  • abnormal behavior is thus normal for that
    learning history
  • Normal and abnormal behaviors maintained by
    similar processes

70
Role of the therapist and therapy structure
  • Therapist is coach
  • Tailors technique to the client
  • Eliminate unwanted behaviors, teach new skills
  • Steps in counseling
  • Problem identification and assessment
  • Inform/ educate client on the process
  • Set behaviorally specific goals
  • Develop and commit to action
  • Evaluate treatment

71
Therapist and Structure (cont)
  • Emphasis on clearly defining goals
  • Able to assess if accomplished
  • Ways to document change
  • Therapy methods tied to verified learning
    principles
  • Research and assessment are central
  • Concrete methods allow testing
  • Generates research
  • Empirically supported treatments (ESTs

72
Therapeutic Tools and Techniques
  • Operant Conditioning
  • Most commonly used
  • Desensitization
  • Cant be relaxed and anxious at same time
  • Create anxiety hierarchy learn relaxation
  • Apply learning to increasing levels of anxiety
  • Implosive therapy
  • Extinguish all at once without grading

73
Tools and Techniques (cont)
  • Aversion therapy
  • Pair aversive stimulus with behavior to remove it
  • Social Skills (assertion) Training
  • Behavior Modification
  • Reward wanted behaviors, remove rewards for
    unwanted behaviors
  • Timeout, token economies, contracting,
    self-management

74
Goals of Behavioral Approaches
  • Purpose of counseling to change self-destructive
    behavior
  • Teach new skills and behaviors
  • Doesnt focus on how problem developed
  • Achieve specific goals
  • Success needs to be observable
  • Self-understanding not a goal

75
Research and Evaluation
  • Emphasis on research, assessment, and empirical
    support of efficacy
  • More easily validated/ supported
  • Specific treatments
  • Generated a lot of research
  • Many ESTs contain cognitive/behavioral elements
  • As effective as other therapies and more
    effective for some problems

76
Contributions of Behavioral Approaches
  • Little emphasis on history
  • Except for assessment of learning conditions
  • Problem-focused
  • Goal directed, focused
  • More specific in era of managed care
  • Works well in brief model
  • Specific techniques
  • Can be more easily evaluated
  • How changes in behavior influence cognitions and
    other factors

77
Overview of Theories
  • Psychodynamic
  • Person-Centered
  • Gestalt / Existential
  • Behavioral Approaches
  • Cognitive Approaches

78
Overview of Cognitive Approaches
  • Key players
  • Aaron Beck- Cognitive therapy for depression
  • Albert Ellis- Rational-Emotive Behavioral Therapy
    (REBT)
  • Donald Meichenbaum
  • Belief that faulty cognitions, distorting
    thinking causes emotional upset, ineffective
    behavior
  • Thoughts influence emotions and behaviors
  • People have capacity for rational/ irrational
    thought

79
Becks Cognitive Therapy
  • Most influential approach
  • First w/ depression
  • Now anxiety, personality disorders
  • Depression results from cognitions (beliefs about
    the world)
  • Focus on thought process,not so much actual
    thoughts
  • Cognitive Triad - negative view of
  • Self - I am an awful person
  • Future Things will never get better, change
  • Experiences Today was awful

80
Beliefs about Psychopathology
  • Automatic irrational thoughts influence
    self-view, behavior, and emotion
  • Extreme, unflexible cognitions
  • Either-or thinking
  • Rigid childhood thinking carried into adulthood
  • Global, absolute, either-or
  • Magnify negative, minimize positive

81
Becks problematic thought processes
  • Selective abstraction
  • Focus on limited info, ignore other info
  • Dichotomous thinking
  • Either-or
  • Overgeneralization
  • Applying information out of context to many other
    unrelated situations

82
Problematic thought processes (cont)
  • Magnification
  • Overestimating importance of event
  • Arbitrary inference
  • Conclude things are bad with no evidence
  • Personalization
  • Events, actions related to oneself when they are
    not

83
Role of the therapist and therapy structure
  • Systematic, structure approach
  • Each session has agenda
  • Therapist more directive
  • Relationship source of learning
  • Core conditions important, but not sufficient
  • Cognitive restructuring and the therapeutic
    process
  • ID dysfunctional beliefs
  • Relate to triggering feelings/ behaviors
  • Learn to modify dysfunctional beliefs
  • Practice

84
Therapeutic Tools and Techniques
  • Behavioral techniques
  • used first with severely depressed patients
  • Daily Activity Sheet
  • sense of mastery/ accomplishment
  • Graded Task Assignments
  • Slowly return to full functioning
  • Cognitive Rehearsal
  • Rehearsal task, create how-to to-do list
  • Role Playing
  • Play another person in similar situation

85
Therapeutic Tools and Techniques (cont)
  • Cognitive techniques
  • Make client aware of connection b/w thoughts and
    feeling
  • Daily record automatic thoughts
  • Record situation, thoughts, feelings, mood
  • Create and practice alternate thoughts
  • Question dysfunction thoughts
  • Evidence? Alternate viewpoints? So what?
  • Homework assignments
  • Test dysfunction and new beliefs

86
Goals of Becks Cognitive Therapy
  • Identify and modify dysfunctional beliefs
  • Cognitive restructuring is core mechanism of
    change
  • Treat thoughts as hypotheses
  • Look for evidence
  • More flexible thought processes

87
Elliss Rational-Emotive Behavioral Therapy
(REBT)
  • Negative emotion and irrational behavior are a
    result of irrational thinking
  • Musturbatory thinking
  • Absolute standard for behavior and life
  • Shoulds
  • ABC theory
  • A activating event
  • B thoughts about the event
  • If B is irrational, then C will be negative
  • B is most important!!
  • C emotion/ behavioral reaction

88
ABC Theory
  • Most people believe an event causes a reaction
  • A (event) C (reaction)
  • Actually one reacts to their interpretation of
    the event! B is crucial!
  • A B C
  • Event Thoughts Reaction

89
Beliefs about Psychopathology
  • Irrational beliefs
  • Rigid
  • Absolute
  • Intolerable
  • Demanding
  • Musturbatory thoughts
  • Turning preferences into needs
  • Need to accept what just is
  • Problems with self-evaluating

90
Beliefs about Psychopathology (cont)
  • Pathology occurs when natural thoughts are held
    to the extreme, held rigidly
  • 3 thought groups
  • Need to be competent and win approval
  • Deserve to be treated kindly, fairly, properly
  • Must have all needs met and things I want

91
Therapeutic Tools and Techniques
  • Disputing irrational thoughts
  • Logically challenging irrational beliefs
  • Steps
  • Narrow to a few basic irrational thoughts
  • Challenge client to validate
  • Create and implement more rational thoughts
  • Test irrational thoughts experientially
  • Homework assignments

92
Role of the therapist
  • More directive than person-centered Beck
  • Unconditional acceptance of client
  • Challenge irrational thoughts
  • Attack is on the behavior thoughts,not the
    person
  • Respect clients value system
  • Doesnt attack values, but the rigid nature

93
Goals of Elliss Cognitive Therapy
  • Dispute and modify irrational beliefs
  • Awareness of how thoughts effect reaction
  • Make reactions less automatic
  • Challenge clients beliefs and request support for
    such
  • Foster acceptance of what is
  • Recognize true needs
  • Focus away from shoulds, musts
  • More flexible thinking, away from rigidity
  • Emphasis away from self-evaluative behavior

94
Beck and Ellis Compared
  • Beck
  • Hypothesis testing
  • Lets client determine which beliefs are
    irrational via testing
  • Less directive
  • BOTH
  • Ask questions, have structure
  • Assign homework
  • Focus on cognitions
  • Ellis
  • Focus on clients beliefs
  • More directive, confronting
  • IDs irrational beliefs

95
Meichenbaums Cognitive Behavior Modification
  • Self-guiding speech directs/ controls behavior
  • Learned through internalization
  • Becomes automatic
  • Maladaptive self-speech
  • Dysfunctional self-speech
  • Absence of self-speech
  • Goal to eliminate dysfunctional and increase
    functional/ adaptive self-speech
  • Create flexible coping strategies

96
Social Cognitive Approaches
  • More to it than operant learning
  • Stimulus serves as a warning, it means something!
  • Vicarious learning- learn by watching others
  • Behavior is situational specific
  • Self-efficacy
  • beliefs in ones ability/competence in specific
    situation
  • Cognitive belief affects actions, performance

97
Cognitive Approaches Research and Evaluation
  • Research demonstrates effectiveness
  • Smith, Glass, Miller (1980)
  • As effective as other approaches
  • Effective for depression, panic attacks,
    generalized anxiety disorder
  • 12 cognitive-behavioral treatments on Division 17
    EVT list
  • Manuals and ease of research

98
Research and Evaluation (cont)
  • Mixed beliefs about relationship b/w thoughts and
    feelings
  • Reciprocal? Which comes first? Strongest
    influence?
  • Value judgment of rational vs. irrational
    thoughts

99
Contributions of Cognitive Approaches
  • Systematic approaches
  • Can be manualized for specific disorders
  • Easily studied
  • Simple language, techniques
  • Explained easily to clients
  • Cognitive language widely used
  • Emphasis on cognitions, idea of schema

100
Remember the Goals?
  • Knowledge of basic counseling fundamentals
  • Overview of the major psychological theories
  • Main theorists, therapeutic goals, strategies,
    and beliefs of psychopathology
  • Gain an appreciation of the variety and overlap
    of theories
  • Begin to discover and formulate your own ideas
    about your theorectical orientation
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