Panel 14 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 1995 - Role of the Therapist / Role of the Client
Featuring William Glasser, M.D.; Lynn Hoffman, A.C.S.W.; Ernest Rossi, Ph.D.; and Joseph Wolpe, M.D.
Moderated by Betty Alice Erickson, MS.
This talk proposes to separate psychotherapy approaches into two groups: one called the "psychological therapies," focused on the growth and development of the individual psyche, and the other, the "social therapies," which deal with broader issues of relationship and the social web. My aim is to create a freer field for dialogue between two points of view that are historically independent from each other and that derive from a different conceptual base.
Supervision Panel 4 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 1995 - Goulding, Marmor and Silverstein
Educational Objectives:
To compare and contrast clinical and philosophical perspectives of experts.
Educational Objectives:
To describe the structure of supervision sessions.
To describe how to help therapists use a cognitive conceptualization for clients.
Dialogue 08 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 2005 - Trauma
Featuring Donald Meichenbaum, PhD, and Bessel van der Kolk, MD
Moderated by Michael Munion, MA
Subject, patient, client, therapist, teacher, trainer, supervisor, supervised; all of us are shaped from an essence, the stuff we are made of, the hero within. This workshop will offer ways to utilize our hidden heroes in our therapeutic goals for inner change, and help the patient build from the hero within him/herself.
The assessment and treatment implications of patient victimization will be critically examined from a constructive narrative perspective. A phase-oriented cognitivebehavioral treatment model will be presented for adults with PTSD, Complex PTSD, and related co-morbid disorders. A critical analysis will be offered of various forms of so-called "memory work" interventions.