After a brief description of Family Therapy in the 1960s and an equally brief description of where it is today, we will make a comparison of the success of family therapy in Europe and the shrinkage in the U.S. A new model of family assessment in four easy steps will be described.
This workshop will be a presentation of segments of one or two family therapy sessions describing how this model gives invaluable information to guide the practitioner in the development of therapy.
EP00 Dialogue 06 - Family Therapy - Salvador Minuchin, M.D., and Zerka Moreno
Given a topic to become aware of the differing approaches to psychotherapy and to identify the strengths and weaknesses in each approach.
Featuring Salvador Minuchin, M.D., and Zerka Moreno, moderated by Jon Carlson, Psy.D., Ed.D.
Topical Panel 07 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 2000 - Training Therapists part II
Featuring Aaron Beck, MD, James F.T. Bugental, PhD, Salvador Minuchin, MD, and Irvin Yalom, MD.
Moderated by Christine Padesky, PhD.
Topical Panel 09 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 2000 - Couple/Family Therapy
Featuring William Glasser, MD, John Gottman, PhD, Salvador Minuchin, PhD, and Peggy Papp, ACSW.
Moderated by Ruth McClendon, MSW
Supervision Panel 3 from the Evolution of Psychotherapy 2000
Featuring Eugene Gendlin, PhD, Harriet Lerner, PhD, and Salvador Minuchin, MD.
Moderated by Michael Yapko, PhD.
Supervision and therapy are isomorphic processes. What supervision teaches is the process of creating change in people, and the very teaching of this process is itself an attempt to create change in the supervisee. Like families, therapists tend to confine themselves to selected segments of their possible repertory. Thus a major goal of supervision can be the expansion of the therapist's use of self.