ABSTRACT

This book presents a new model for conceptualizing and applying a social and cognitive perspective on therapeutic practice. Building on the micro-skills framework for training, the author adds cognitive modifiability theories to create a social cognition approach to training and practice. The material has been field tested in a graduate academic context and in consultation in mental health settings, and chapters contain didactic explications, illustrative examples, practice exercises, and graphic schemas to help readers integrate specific practices into a broader comprehensive theoretical framework. Mental health professionals and students in advanced counseling courses will find that this book broadens their perspectives beyond basic micro-skills approaches and provides an expansive and systematic framework for conceptualizing the therapeutic process.

chapter 1|10 pages

Formulating the Process of Counseling

The Dynamics of Behavioral Change

chapter 2|21 pages

A Theoretical Foundation for the Therapeutic Process

Mediated Learning Experience (MLE)

chapter 3|32 pages

Applying MLE to the Therapeutic Process

chapter 4|12 pages

Social Cognition

A Foundation for Affective and Behavioral Change

chapter 8|7 pages

The Focus of the Interaction

Content versus Process

chapter 9|7 pages

The Nature of the Therapeutic Response

Implicit versus Explicit

chapter 10|11 pages

Application of the Model