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Contemporary Issues in Couples Counseling explores the most
difficult issues that people in the helping professions face when
treating couples and provides concrete solutions for addressing
them effectively. Using the revolutionary choice theory and reality
therapy approaches to couples counseling, the book shows clinicians
how to combine a relationship-based approach with the pragmatism of
cognitive-behavior therapies. Both experienced and beginning
clinicians will find Contemporary Issues in Couples Counseling
ideal for helping clients focus on the here and now, not the past,
and for creating treatment plans that meet clients' individual
needs while also addressing the needs of their partners.
This text is a comprehensive, practical, clearly illustrated
examination of reality therapy. It includes an historically
significant interview with William Glasser, MD, multicultural
applications and research based studies. Its goal is to enhance the
skills of helpers so that clients may live a more effective life
through a total balance of love, health, and happiness. To help
teach reality therapy, the author encapsulates the delivery system
into the acronym "WDEP". It is expanded to include 22 types of
self-evaluation which counsellors and therapists can use to shorten
therapy time in the current managed care environment. Each
component of the delivery system is illustrated with dialogues so
that the reader can see exactly how the system is practical and
immediately usable.
Contemporary Issues in Couples Counseling explores the most
difficult issues that people in the helping professions face when
treating couples and provides concrete solutions for addressing
them effectively. Using the revolutionary choice theory and reality
therapy approaches to couples counseling, the book shows clinicians
how to combine a relationship-based approach with the pragmatism of
cognitive-behavior therapies. Both experienced and beginning
clinicians will find Contemporary Issues in Couples Counseling
ideal for helping clients focus on the here and now, not the past,
and for creating treatment plans that meet clients' individual
needs while also addressing the needs of their partners.
Reality Therapy for the 21st Century aims to be the most comprehensive, practical, clearly illustrated examination of reality therapy currently available. Well-written in an easy to read style, the book includes an historically significant interview with William Glasser, MD, multicultural applications and research based studies. Its goal is to enhance the skills of helpers so that clients may live more effective lives through a total balance of love, health, and happiness. The book significantly extends the practice of reality therapy. To help teach reality therapy, the author encapsulates the delivery system into the acronym 'WDEP'. It is expanded to include 22 types of self-evaluation which counselors and therapists can use to shorten therapy time in the current managed care environment. Each component of the delivery system is illustrated with dialogues so that the reader can see exactly how the system is practical and immediately usable.
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In Reality Therapy, Robert E. Wubbolding explores the history,
theory, research, and practice of this choice-focused approach to
psychotherapy. William Glasser first developed the ideas behind
reality therapy in the 1950s and 1960s when he formulated the basis
of choice theory, which concerns the way human beings choose their
own behavior and how these choices can either satisfy or not
satisfy basic drives and goals. Using this theoretical basis,
reality therapy helps clients to learn to be more aware of their
choices and how these choices may be inefficient in achieving their
goals. Framing behavior as a choice, a choice made by client's
internal control, leads clients to feel more responsible and in
command of their lives. Reality therapy is structured around the
WDEP system (wants, doing, evaluation, and planning): The reality
therapist works with clients to explore their wants and what they
are doing to achieve those wants, evaluating whether what they are
doing is helpful or harmful to their goals, and finally helping the
client plan ways to change their behavior. In this book, Wubbolding
presents and explores this approach, its theory, history, therapy
process, primary change mechanisms, the empirical basis for its
effectiveness, and contemporary and future developments. This
essential primer, amply illustrated with case examples featuring
diverse clients, is perfect for graduate students studying theories
of therapy and counseling, as well as for seasoned practitioners
interested in understanding how this approach has evolved and how
it might be used in their practice.
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