Transactional Analysis Counselling in ActionSAGE, 23 Okt 2013 - 280 halaman Selling over 25,000 copies across three editions, this book provides an unrivalled introduction to the core concepts and basic techniques of Transactional Analysis (TA). Ian Stewart guides the reader step-by-step through the successive stages in using TA to create therapeutic change, building understanding of the way the approach works in real-life practice. Key features of this new edition include: -a single extended case study running through the book -′Key ideas′ panels to summarize the main ideas in each section -Detailed discussion of ′closing the escape hatches′: TA′s distinctive approach to resolving the issues of suicide, self-harm or violence -Practice Checklists offering suggested questions readers can use to appraise their own work with clients at strategic points in the text - Space for Reflection sections and Further Reading lists to conclude each chapter. This bestselling textbook offers trainee and practising psychotherapists and counsellors a concise, hands-on exploration of current concepts and techniques in Transactional Analysis. Ian Stewart is Co-Director of The Berne Institute, Nottingham. He is the author of Eric Berne (SAGE, 1992) and Developing Transactional Analysis Counselling (SAGE, 1996), and co-author of TA Today (2nd edn, Lifespace, 2012). |
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... interventions by which you canhelp your client achieve that change. Lastly,Chapter 11 discusses criteria for termination ... intervention? What are your purposes in doing so? • A description ofa specific technique or techniques. • A case ...
... interventions. As one element of protection, TA lays much emphasis on forestalling threetragic outcomes. They are: killing or harming self, killingor harming others, orgoing crazy. In Chapter 7 weshall look at this protective process of ...
... interventions to facilitate the clientin achieving the agreed contract, in thelightof your diagnosis ofthe client. 2 Choice of interventions means choosing which interventions to use and in what order to use them. 3 In Planningthe Route ...
... interventions to use, you need to consider both content and process:what you do and how you doit. 4 In choosing the orderof your interventions, you are deciding the treatment sequence. To review the basic notion of contractmaking in TA ...
... intervention. Theyare: • the Racket System (Chapters 3 and 6) • the Discount Matrix (Chapter 9). Treatment. Sequence. The rationale of treatment sequence is that there are stages in treatment that need to be addressed in a particular ...
Isi
Separating Past from Present | |
THE PROCESS OF COUNSELLING WITH | |
Taking the First Steps | |
Exploringa Childhood LifePlan | |
Forestalling Tragic Outcomes | |
Making Contracts for Change | |
Challenging Outdated Beliefs | |
Making New Decisions | |
Ending Counselling | |
References | |
Index | |