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Weeks, Gerald R. – American Journal of Family Therapy, 1986
Describes how dialectic metatherapy may be used to integrate various dimensions of human development as they pertain to symptom formation and therapy. A dialectical conceptualization of therapy allows one to systematically organize individually and systematically oriented ideas. Points out the paradoxical nature of therapy and how to use this…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Family Counseling, Individual Psychology, Personality Theories
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Rohrbaugh, Michael – American Journal of Family Therapy, 1986
Q-sorts by experts were used to compare four structural/strategic/systemic therapy models. Results suggest that the models share a practical, strategic orientation to change, emphasizing reframing, but attach different importance to history, inference, abstraction, and contextual breadth. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Comparative Analysis, Counseling Theories, Family Counseling
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Dinkmeyer, Don; Dinkmeyer, Don, Jr. – American Journal of Family Therapy, 1979
This paper emphasizes the importance of parent education, particularly in our current rapidly changing society. The history of parent education is briefly reviewed and a new program called STEP, Systematic Training for Effective Parenting, is described. (Author)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Behavior Change, Behavior Patterns, Child Rearing
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Perlmutter, Morton S.; Hatfield, Elaine – American Journal of Family Therapy, 1980
Argues that theorists have ignored insights of family therapists such as Bateson, Boszormenyi-Nagy and Spark, Satir, and Watzlawick and Weakland. Family therapy provides unique insights into the nature of intimacy. Existing case material adds to descriptions of intimate relations. Examples of how systems theorists could look at intimacy supplement…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Communication (Thought Transfer), Disclosure, Family (Sociological Unit)