Group Process and Practice
Questioning
aims at stimulating thought and action but avoiding question/answer patterns of interaction between leader and member.
Universality
allows members to see commonalities in the shared personal concerns expressed by members; themes emerge within a group that leads members to appreciate a range of basic human concerns.
Research Orientation
allows therapists to remain flexible and responsive to new evidence
Task groups (p.7)
also known as task facilitation groups, focus on the application of group dynamics principles and processes to improve practice and foster accomplishment of identified work goals.
Diversity competent group leaders:
are AWARE of personal beliefs & attitudes, biases, values, prejudices, assumptions; have KNOWLEDGE of the cultures of group members; can implement SKILLS & interventions appropriate to the culture; understand your possible privilege and power status in group
Contracts
are a way to help members assume an active and responsible stance; a contract is a statement by participants of what problems they want to explore and what behaviors they are willing to change.
Explicit norms
are clearly and directly stated norms
Closed groups
are composed of the same group members for the lifetime of a group, which is usually time-limited.
Therapeutic factors
are the dynamics within a group that play a key role in producing constructive changes.
Group norms
are the shared beliefs about expected behaviors aimed at making groups function effectively.
Open groups
are those that are characterized by changing membership.
Implicit norms
are unspoken ones that can have an effect on shaping the members' responses and behaviors.
Resistance
can be viewed as the individual's reluctance to bring into conscious awareness threatening material that has been previously repressed or denied.
Postgroup meetings
consist of a follow-up sessions scheduled sometime after the termination of a group as an evaluative approach and a measure of accountability
Empathizing
consists of adopting the internal frame of reference of a member.
Pregroup stage
consists of all the factors involved in the formation of a group, such as screening, selection, and orientation of members
Homework
consists of assignments of behaviors that members can practice both in and out of the group.
Negligence
consists of departing from the standard of care that results in injury to the client.
Suggesting
consists of offering information or possibilities for action that can be used by members in making independent decisions.
Supporting
consists of offering some form of positive reinforcement at appropriate times in such a way that it has a facilitating effect.
Co-leadership model advantage
decreases burnout, less overwhelming, one leader can operate if another must be absent, peer supervision, helps manage countertransference by providing different perspective on interpretation, can help process members reactions to other leader.
Legal issues
define the minimum standards society will tolerate, which are enforced by rule of law at the local, state, or national level.
Contracts
during the final stage of a group outline specific steps members agree to take to increase their chances of successfully meeting their goals when the group ends.
Culture
encompasses the values, beliefs, and behaviors shared by a group of people. Broadly defined, culture takes into consideration demographic variables (age, gender, and residence), status variables (social, educational, and economic), and affiliations (formal and informal).
Narrative therapy
encourages group members to view their life stories from different perspectives. Grounded in a philosophical framework, narrative practices assist members in finding new meanings and new possibilities in their lives.
Clarifying
entails focusing on the underlying issues and assisting others to get a clearer picture of what they are thinking or feeling.
Involuntary membership
entails members being required to attend a group
Co-leadership Model Disadvantage
failure to meet; failure to cooperate, poor selection, random assignment can lead to poor working sills modeled to group
Structured groups
focus on a particular theme and are often psychoeducational in nature.
Psychoeducation group focus: (p. 8)
focus on developing members' cognitive, affective, and behavioral skills through a structured set of procedures within and across group meetings.
Counseling groups focus (p. 9)
focus on interpersonal process and problem-solving strategies that stress conscious thoughts, feelings, and behavior. may be designed for prevention, development, or remediation purposes.
Behavioral domain
focuses on the action and doing component as being central to the change process.
Affective domain
focuses on the feelings of group members
Brief group therapy (BGT)
generally refers to groups that are time limited, structured and last 2 to 3 months, and consist of 8 to 12 weekly meetings.
Groups as natural laboratory
groups present a microcosm of society in which members can experiement with new ways of being; interpersonal difficulties get played out in the group, feedback from is essential to change
Psychotherapy groups
have the purpose of assisting members remediate psychological problems
Genuineness
implies congruence between a person's inner experience and she he or she projects externally.
Group process
includes activities such as establishing norms and group cohesion, learning to work cooperatively, establishing ways of solving problems, and learning to express conflict openly.
Clinical issues
involve using your professional judgment to act in accordance with ethical and legal mandates.
Caring confrontation
involves a timely challenge to invite members to look at aspects of themselves that they have been avoiding.
Reflecting
involves capturing the underlying meaning of what is said or felt and expressing this without being mechanical.
Confronting
involves challenging members to look at some aspects of their behavior.
Modeling
involves demonstrating to members desired behaviors that can be practiced both during and between group sessions
Active listening
involves hearing and understanding both subtle and direct messages, and communicating this to a group member.
Facilitating
involves helping members to express themselves clearly and to take action in a group.
Summarizing
involves identifying key elements and common themes and providing a picture of the directional trends of a group session.
Screening
involves interviewing potential group members to determine if they are likely to benefit from a particular group experience.
Informed consent
involves providing members with a disclosure statement that describes information about a group.
Integrative approach
involves the process of selecting concepts and methods from various theoretical approaches
Therapeutic group (p.6)
is a general term that refers to groups with the purposes of increasing members' knowledge of themselves and others, clarifying the changes them want to make in their lives, and providing them with tools needed to make these changes.
Privileged communication
is a legal concept that generally bars the disclosure of confidential communications in a legal proceeding.
Pregroup meeting
is a preliminary session that provides members with more information to help them decide if they are willing to commit themselves to a group experience. A pregroup session is a time for orientation of group members.
Group cohesion
is a sense of togetherness, or community, within a group.
Assessing
is a set of skills that includes the ability to appraise certain behavior problems and to choose the appropriate intervention.
Terminating
is a skill of ending work with individuals and groups.
Linking
is a technique aimed at promoting member-to-member interaction and facilitating exploration of common themes in a group.
Hope
is a therapeutic factor in a group that leads to the realization that change is possible.
Catharsis
is a therapeutic factor that involves the expression of feelings that have been denied expression; these feelings can be released verbally or physically.
Practitioner resistance
is a therapeutic impasse resulting from the therapist's failure to listen to and understand group members.
Final stage
is a time in a group for members to consolidate their learning and developing ways for transferring what they learned in the group to daily life.
Gestalt therapy
is an existential-phenomenological approach based on the premise that individuals must be understood in the context of their ongoing relationship with the environment.
Blocking
is an intervention aimed at stopping counterproductive behaviors in a group or to protect members.
Hidden agenda
is an issue that is not openly acknowledged and discussed, which can result in bogging down a group.
Evaluating
is appraising the ongoing group process and the individual and group dynamics
The transition stage
is characterized by anxiety, defensiveness, resistance, a range of control issues, intermember conflicts, challenges to or conflicts with the leader, and various patterns of problem behaviors.
Initiating
is demonstrating an active stance in intervening in a group at appropriate times.
Interpreting
is explaining the meaning of behavior patterns within some theoretical framework.
Feedback
is information that is shared within a group with emphasis on how members are being perceived. Interpersonal feedback occurs when group members of leaders share their observations and personal reactions regarding the behavior or feelings of another.
The Optimal Group CLimate
is safe, positive, and supportive yet can withstand highly charged emotions, challenges, and interactions between members and is increased by leader's interpersonal skills of warmth, genuineness, empathy
Initial stage of a group
is the period characterized by an orientation to how the group works, getting acquainted, establishing trust, and defining personal goals.
Working stage
is the period in a group characterized by an increased commitment of members to deal with significant problems they bring to the sessions and a more in-depth self-exploration. There is an increased of action-oriented behaviors such as self-disclosure, giving and receiving feedback, and discussion of here-and-now interactions.
Identification
is the process by which a member can relate to the concerns of others.
Caring
is the therapeutic factor in a group that is best demonstrated by listening and involvement and by staying present with others.
Psychoeducation group leader task: (p.8)
main task is to provide instruction and create a positive climate that fosters learning
Co-leader common mistakes
not sitting opposite each other for eye contact; not communicating plans; monopolize time or competing; trying to be right and make co-leader wrong; one leader does most of work while other is quite; taking turns instead of adding to each others interventions
Common multicultural challenge in establishing goals for group
occurs when success in one culture directly contradicts what success in another culture looks like
Ethical issues
pertain to standards that govern the conduct of professional members.
Theoretical integration
pertains to a conceptual or theoretical creation beyond a mere blending of techniques.
Division of responsibility
pertains to the balance of responsibility for the direction of a group between members and the leader.
Group process
pertains to the dynamics such as the norms that govern a group, the level of cohesion in a group, how trust is generated, how conflict emerges and is addressed, the forces that bring about healing, intermember feedback, and the various stages in the life of a group
Structuring
pertains to the leader's interventions in providing direction or guidance.
Cognitive domain
pertains to the thinking or thought processes of group members.
Goals of Multicultural Groupwork
promote human development, enhance interpersonal relationships; promote task achievement; remediate disorders and distress; lessen the risk of distress, disability, loss of dignity or autonomy
Solution-focused brief therapy
provides a context whereby individuals focus on recovering and creating solutions rather than talking about their problems.
Cultural norms
refer to differences among various cultural groups and the values influencing behavior.
Group norms
refer to the expectations that govern behavior within a group.
Competence
refers to a group leader's skills and knowledge required to effectively facilitate a group.
Group techniques
refers to a leader's explicit and directive request of a member for the purpose of focusing on material, augmenting or exaggerating affect, practicing behavior, or solidifying insight.
Unfinished business
refers to encouraging members to express and work through personal concerns or reactions to others prior to the final meeting of a group.
Technical eclecticism
refers to selecting techniques from various theoretical approaches without necessarily subscribing to the particular orientation.
Modeling
refers to specific behaviors that either group members or the group leader displays in a group session as a way to demonstrate a behavioral style.
Empathy
refers to the act of perceiving the internal frame of reference of another, of grasping a person's subjective world, without losing one's own identity.
Countertransference
refers to the group leader's unconscious emotional responses to a group member that are likely to interfere with objectivity; unresolved conflicts of the group leader that are projected onto a group member.
Transference
refers to the group member's unconscious shifting to the group leader or to another member of feelings, both positive and negative, that are displacements from reactions to significant others from a member's past. A group context has the potential for multiple transferences.
Recognizable factors of Positive outcomes in group therapy
skilled leadership, appropriately referred members, clearly defined goals
Brief Group Therapy advantages
suited to managed care climate, cost-effective, widely applicable to diverse issues, clients,and settings
Types of Groups
task group: accomplish work goals, psychoeducational group: educate, group counseling: prevent & educate here&now, group psychotherapy: remediation of in-depth issues of past& present, brief group therapy
Dynamics of each theoretical stance
thinking, feeling, doing
Courage needed in group leader
to be vulnerable; to confront when necessary; to act on beliefs and huncches; to be emotionally affected and draw on personal experiences; to examine own life; to be direct & honest while being caring & respectful
Counseling groups leader task (p. 9)
to structure the activities of the group, to create a climate favorable to productive work, to facilitate interactions, to provide alternatives to behavior, to help translate insight into concrete action plans