Title: Social Work with Families
1Social Work with Families
2Definition of a family
- Definition of a family
- Gender Roles, Ideologies, cultural background and
social class play roles in behavioral
expectations and attitudes. - Families Comprise a system which involves a set
of rules, assigned and ascribed roles.
3Families Continued
- Families Continued organized power structure,
developed intricate overt and covert forms of
communication, and has elaborated ways of
negotiating and problem solving. Within the
family system individuals are tied to each
other by powerful, durable, reciprocal,
multigenerational emotional attachments. -
4Ways Systems Are Shaped
- Race
- Ethnicity
- Social Class
- Family Life Cycle Stage
- Number of Generations in this country
- Sexual Orientation
- Religious Affiliation
5Ways Continued
- Physical and Mental Health
- Educational Attainment
- Financial Security
- Family Values and Belief Systems
- Family Entrance such as first birth, etc.
- Later and Earlier Marriages
- Foster Parenting
6Family Disruptions
- Families were disrupted by the early death of a
parent, abandonment by a breadwinner, changes
such as remarriage, child placed with relatives,
foster care, and orphanages.
7Couples Living Together With or Without Children
- Now more long-term unmarried cohabitating couples
live together with or without children. This is
due to - The high divorce rate
- Never married couples with children
- Step-families and adoptive families
- Same sex couples living together with or without
children.
8Constantine (1986)
- Distinguishes between enabled and disabled
family systems. In the enabled system it
balances the needs as a family unit while
operating on behalf of the interests of all its
members as individuals.
9Nuclear or Step-Families
- All families must work to promote positive
relations among members and attend to the
personal needs of the members. - The members must prepare to cope with the
developmental or maturational changes such as
children leaving home and unexpected or unplanned
crises such as job dislocation or loss, divorce,
death of a family member, a sudden severe
illness.
10Gender Roles
- Changes have had powerful impact on the family
structure and functioning. Dual career families
face challenges. An Example is a sick
child-which parent takes off to take care of the
child? For dual earners, who are the
working-class, the sick child may become a family
crises if the jobs do not permit time off for
either parent.
11Ethnicity and Family Therapy
- Different ethnicities have family issues that are
important to them. They may have different
assumptions about the therapeutic process. These
families may bring different tools and resources
in for dealing with the issues.
12Families in Poverty
- About 12 of the general American population and
28 percent of households are headed by single
women (U.S. Census Bureau, 2000).
13Theories
- Postmodern Outlook-There is no true reality, only
the families collectively agreed upon set of
constructions, that is created through language
and knowledge. This is relational and
generatively based that the family calls reality.
(Harlene Anderson, etc.)
14Resilience
- According to (Walsh, 2003), resilience is the
key, key family processes, positive belief system
provides for shared values and assumptions to
offer guidelines for meaning and for future
action, familys organizational processes, how
effective it organizes its resources) provide
shock absorbers when confronted with stress. A
set of family communication/problem solving that
are clear forms resilience.
15Family Organization-Dyads Triads
- Dyads are two person relationships
- Triads are three person relationships
- These models can sometimes develop into family
coalitions and can sometimes manifest into
triangulation. - Family therapy, alters the family system in that
it helps families, replace their previous
limiting and self-defeating, repetitive
interactive patterns.
16Cybernetic Principles
- Palo Alto Group took cybernetic principles and
applied them to communication processes including
those associated with psychopathology. - Gregory Bateson (1972).
17Double Bind Theory
- Looks beyond the symptomatic person to family
transactions. The content language of linear
causality where one event causes the next
stimulus response - Circular causality is emphasis on the forces
moving in many directions simultaneously.
18Identified Patient
- Virginia Satir (1964) contended that the IP was
expressing the familys disequilibrium or the
familys pain Jay Haley (1979). - Michael Zielenziger, 2003, described disturbed
young people who do not leave home as unwillingly
sacrificing themselves in order to protect and
maintain family stability. (Shutting Out the
Sun).
19Family Loyalty
- Family loyalty may evoke symptomatic behavior
when a child feels obligated to save the
parents and their marriage from the threat of
destruction (Boszormenyi, Nagy and Ulrich, 1981). - Salvador Minuchin (1981), viewed symptomatic
behavior as a reaction to a family under stress
and unable to accommodate the changing
circumstances, and not particularly as a
proactive solution to maintain family balance.
20Watzlawick, Weakland, Fisch (1974)
- The use of the same flawed solutions rather than
being a sign of family system dysfunction.
Problems are created and maintained because of
the repeated attempt to apply the unworkable
solution that only serves to make matters worse.
Ultimately the solution becomes the problem. The
family therapist must come up with new solutions
for the original problem. Think of the adage if
you do the same things over and over-gets the
same result.
21Post-Modern
- Represents a break with the cybernetically based
notions which raise skepticism in regard to the
meaning attached to symptomatic behavior. They
do not believe that a family members problem is
a reflection of underlying family conflict. - Constructivist-tell themselves stories, develop
beliefs about themselves, constructions organize
experiences and play a powerful role in shaping
their lives. - Stories can represent dominant and burdensome
discourses-belief in limited options and doomed
to repeat self-defeating behavior.
22Oppression in families
- Michael White (1989) observed that families feel
oppressed rather than protected or stabilized by
symptomatic behavior in the family. - Therapeutic effort known as Narrative Therapy
which consisted of deconstructing questions. It
represents a collaboration with the family
directed at helping them explore their on-going
stories. They can then construct new stories
with new possibilities.
23Oppression cont
- Family members should unite and take back control
of their lives from the oppressive set of
symptoms. Families are free to view themselves
as a healthy, unit struggling against a
troublesome external problem rather than seeing
themselves as inherently flawed and disabled
group of people.
24Second Order Cybernetics-Lynn Hoffman (2002).
- She advocates for second-order cybernetics, a
post-systems reappraisal of cybernetic theorizing
that insists that there can be no outside,
independent observer of the system, since anyone
observing and trying to change the system is a
participant who influences and is influenced by
the system.
25First Order cybernetics conceives of two separate
systems.
- The therapist system
- The problem-client family system in which the
therapist remains an external observer. He/She
is an expert who attempts to affect changes by
means of interventions.
26Second Order Cybernetics
- Believes in doing family therapy-Therapist must
be aware that several individuals are present,
each with his/her own view of reality and
description of the family. - According to cybernetics, objectivity does not
exist.
27Social Constructivists
- Believe that the therapist can no longer be seen
as an outside observer or expert on the problem
situation. He/She has a part in constructing the
reality being observed. - Therapist does not operate as if any single
family member can tell the truth about the family
or its problems. There are multiple truths and
not one universal truth. - The therapist and family together create a new
narrative which transforms the pathological take
that brought the family into therapy (Doherty,
1991).
28Batesman(1972), Maturana, (1978), Varela, (1979),
Foerster, (1981), Glaserfeld, (1987).
- Urged the abandonment of simple cybernetic notion
that a living system can be - Observed
- Studied Objectively
- Changed from the outside. They placed the
observer in that which was being observed. The
therapist and family members together search for
meaning and in the process re-author lives and
relationships.
29Salvador Minuchin (1991).
- Questioned the extent to which the new approach
recognized the institutions and the socioeconomic
conditions that influence how people live,
pointing out that families had been stripped of
much of the power to write their own stories. - An example of this is families living in poverty.