This document provides an overview of solution-focused brief therapy (SFBT). It discusses the history and tenets of SFBT, which was developed in the late 1970s and focuses on exceptions, the future, and what is working for the client rather than problems. The document outlines the core SFBT skills of not knowing, complementing strengths, using scaling questions, exploring exceptions, asking coping questions, and the miracle question. It describes implementing these skills through roleplays and discusses how SFBT connects to building rapport, co-creating goals, and relating to other treatment approaches like motivational interviewing.
4. About the Training
ï Purpose
ï Background Information
ï Agenda
⊠Directions of Focus
⊠General SFBT Information
⊠SFBT Skills & Experiential Learning
⊠SFBT & Practice
⊠SFBT & Other Treatments
9. About SFBT
History
ï Steve de Shazer, Insoo Kim
Berg, and their colleagues
developed Solution-Focused Brief
Therapy starting in the late
1970âs
ï Utilized in business, social
policy, education, criminal justice
services, child welfare, and
domestic violence offender
treatment
10. About SFBT
Tenets
ï If itâs not broken, donât fix it
ï Look for exceptions
ï Asking questions rather than telling
clients what to do
ï Future is negotiated and created
ï Complements
ï Gentle nudging to do more of what is
working
ï Change is constant and inevitable
ï The solution is not always directly
related to the problem
16. SFBT Interventions
Complementing Strengths
ï Strengths perspective
ï Building rapport and giving
hope
ï Direct complements: positive
evaluation or reaction
ï Indirect complements: a
question implying something
positive
17. SFBT Interventions
Scaling Questions
ï Uses in other techniques
ï Motivation, hopefulness, depres
sion, confidence, progress⊠etc
ï Techniques for follow-up
18. SFBT Interventions
Exploring Exceptions
ï Problem description vs.
exceptions
ï Increase awareness of
current/past successes
ï Turning past solutions into
present solutions
ï Finding out specifics
ï Creating a plan
19. SFBT Interventions
Coping Questions
ï Tailored to help client from
feeling overwhelmed
ï A method for exploring
exceptions
ï Finding the clients strengths
20. SFBT Interventions
Miracle question
ï Amplifying what the client
wants
ï Formatting the question
ï Concrete, behavioral, measurab
le terms
ï Realistic terms
21. Experiential Learning
Think about a difficult client to
work with. Interview you partner.
ï Implement a stance of not
knowing
ï Use the miracle question to come
up with a goal of being a better
clinician.
ï Explore for strengths and
complement them.
ï Elicit exceptions and coping
methods for creating a plan.
ï Utilize scaling questions.
23. Connecting SFBT to Practice
ï Building rapport
ï Co-created treatment goals
ï Creative plans
ï Individual meetings
ï Reviewing treatment goals
24. Connecting SFBT
to other Techniques
ï Strengths perspective
ï Motivational interviewing
⊠Micro practice skills
⊠Client as expert
⊠Contrast to medical model
⊠Anchored in change