GETTING STARTED AND STARTING PLAY:
THE PSYCHOTHERAPIST’S STANCE AND THE BEGINNING PHASE OF THERAPY
CHAPTER 2
Multiple Choice Questions
- One of the basic premises of psychodynamic child psychotherapy is the dynamic point of view which assumes that :
- Children’s behavior is mediated by mental states, like thoughts, feelings, needs and desires
- Most of the motives of children’s behavior are unconscious
- Children’s behavior, however ;painful, bizarre or maladaptive, is meaningful and intentional
- A & C
- All of the above
- Repression
- Is only present in neurotic adults
- Is a defensive process by which attention is shifted away from painful or conflictive mental states
- Results in procedural patterns of feelings and response that are not accessible to subjective experience
- A & C
- All of the above
- The developmental premise of psychodynamic child psychotherapy
- Informs an aim of therapy: to help children free themselves from being “stuck” in repeating patterns of coping and experience
- Provides a goal of therapy: to reinstate children in the path of development
- Suggest that the currents of feelings, needs and conflict from past relationships will be transferred to the current relationship with the therapist
- A & C
- All of the above
- Resistance to change
- Is best understood as the consequence of children’s experience of trauma
- Is best managed by reassuring children that their fear of change is not rational
- Is an expectable consequence of how behavior – including symptomatic behavior – is typically the child’s best effort to cope with his conflicts and environment
- A & C
- All of the above
- Among the pioneers of psychodynamic child psychotherapy
- Hermine Hug-Helmuth was the first to use children’s spontaneous play to gain access to children’s inner world of subjective experience
- Melanie Klein used play to interpret children’s fantasies as experienced in the relationship with the therapist
- Anna Freud focused on understanding children’s conflicts and defenses and educating parents and teachers
- A & C
- All of the above
- Play can communicate
- Experiences of the past, the present and the relationship with the therapist
- Mostly an effort of children to distract themselves from their conflicts, thus the therapist should gently guide children to replace playing with the direct communication in words
- A central therapeutic mechanism of psychodynamic therapy which is achieved by promoting children’s capacity to engage in reciprocal, symbolic play
- A & C
- All of the above
- The “stance” of the therapist in psychodynamic child psychotherapy
- Communicates interest in engaging with the child, validates his/her experience and follows the child’s leads
- Should reflect neutrality, no gratification, and the anonymity necessary to promote the development of a transference relationship
- Helps children understand the unconscious meaning of his/her play by vigorously interpreting with an attitude of confidence and conviction that helps children feel safe
- A & C
- All of the above
- To start a psychodynamic child psychotherapy session the therapist
- Follows the child’s lead
- Is tentative in his understanding and interpretation
- Sets “rules of playing” designed to make the expression of feelings safe
- A & C
- All of the above
- Signs of breakdown in the reciprocal and symbolic quality of the child’s play
- Are marked by a breakdown of give – and – take, turn – taking, coherence or “making sense” of the narrative of the play, and more coercive behavior, rigidity
- Are an indication for the therapist to set limits and reassure the child
- Are an indication for the therapist to interpret resistances the child experiences in the transference
- A & C
- All of the above
- To promote engagement and symbolic, reciprocal play
- Therapists talk uses simple, brief, jargon-free language that is not patronizing but is respectful of children’s capacities
- Asks questions that encourage elaboration, exploration and expression of thoughts and feelings in the play
- Notices and highlights when children recognize, express, and/or link thoughts and feelings to actions and problems
- A & C
- All of the above