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Interpersonal and Relational Processes in Conjoint Behavioral Consultation

Interpersonal and Relational Processes in Conjoint Behavioral Consultation. Ariadne Schemm & Valerie Gortmaker. Development of Relationship-Building Competencies in Consultees. Overt Didactic Approach Role Model Practice Feedback. Training Interpersonal Skills. Skill Domains.

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Interpersonal and Relational Processes in Conjoint Behavioral Consultation

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  1. Interpersonal and Relational Processes in Conjoint Behavioral Consultation Ariadne Schemm & Valerie Gortmaker

  2. Development of Relationship-Building Competencies in Consultees • Overt Didactic Approach • Role Model • Practice • Feedback

  3. Training Interpersonal Skills

  4. SkillDomains • Microskills • Perspective Taking • Building Partnerships • Conflict Management

  5. Microskills • Open Questions • Minimal Encouragers • Reflection • Self-disclosure • Paraphrase/Summarize

  6. Open Questions • Questions that are designed to elicit more than a single response (they open the opportunity for the client to talk, elaborate, and/or describe situations) • Video Clip

  7. Minimal Encouragers • Statements or gestures that encourage the consultee to communicate their thoughts or ideas (e.g., um hum, huh or head nods).

  8. Reflection • A statement made by the consultant that responds to the emotional tone of the consultee’s message.

  9. Self-Disclosure • Personal experiences of the consultant shared with the consultee within the consultative relationship.

  10. Paraphrase • Paraphrase: A statement that rephrases the content of the consultee’s message (i.e., describing a situation, event, person, or idea) using one’s own language. • Video Clip

  11. Summarize • Summarize: A statement that combines two or more paraphrases and condenses the essential elements of the consultee’s message.

  12. Perspective Taking • Listen to and Acknowledge Different Perspectives • Adopt a Non-deficit Approach • Be Responsive

  13. Listen to and Acknowledge Different Perspectives • Help the consultees see that the situation can be viewed from different vantage points, and that this can be beneficial for problem-solving. • Video Clip

  14. Adopt a Non-deficit Approach • Place attention on the shared strengths of the home, school and child, rather than on efforts to “fix” child, family or school problems. • Video Clip

  15. Be Responsive • Attend to consultee’s needs and provide effective resources.

  16. Building Partnerships • Point out Similar Experiences • Point out Consultee Contributions • Develop Opportunities for Positive Communication

  17. Point out Similar Experiences • Highlight the similarity of examples provided by the parents and teachers.

  18. Point out Consultee Contributions • Recognize the benefits associated with the unique contributions of parents and educators.

  19. Positive Communication • Emphasize the positive and realistic aspects of the child (e.g., “good news” phone calls).

  20. Conflict Management • Focus on Mutual Goals • Use Language to Unify (e.g., us, we, our) • Reframing • Provide Structure • Read Nonverbal Language

  21. Focus on Mutual Goals • Place an emphasis on the situation and concerns shared across systems, not the individual parent, teacher or student.

  22. Use Language to Unify • Emphasize a team concept with words such as “we,” “us,” and “together.”

  23. Reframing • Re-name or re-label a consultee’s thoughts, feelings, or beliefs about a particular individual, situation, or process to provide an alternate positive frame of reference.

  24. Provide Structure • Use the structured problem solving steps to systematically resolve the issue.

  25. Read Nonverbal Language • Be attentive to the consultee’s nonverbal cues.

  26. Interpersonal skills are the keys to bringing systems together in a supportive and collaborative manner. • Didactic supervision presents interpersonal skills as a vehicle to build home-school partnerships. • Role playing and role-modeling provide interpersonal practice to facilitate individual development. • On-site practicum provides training and feedback experience in real-life situations.

  27. The Effect of Good Interpersonal Skills • Interpersonal skills are the roots upon which one needs to build the more systemic goals to ultimately meet the needs of the child. • Build awareness of interpersonal skills through building competencies. • Once competencies are built, consultants use skills to ultimately meet more systemic goals of providing home-school partnerships and focusing on family needs.

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