INTRODUCTION.
I. PRACTICING THE ART.
1. Why Choose Co-Therapy?
2. Educational Reasons for Shared Leadership.
3. How to Choose a Co-Therapist.
4. Why a Co-Therapy Team Becomes Successful.
5. Co-Therapy Teams in Trouble: Impasses and Crises.
6. Treatment of a Borderline and a Narcissistic Patient in
Co-Therapy
II. MASTER PRACTITIONERS
7. Phases of Co-Therapy Team Development, Dugo & Beck.
8. An Intimate Model for Co-Therapy, Goulding & Goulding.
9. Therapists and Parents as Models for Being Human, Satir.
Bill Roller, M.A., is a licensed Marriage, Family, and Child Counselor in private practice as a psychotherapist and a organizational consultant in Berkeley, California.
Mix a professional marriage for Process with a personal marriage
for power. Then spice with clinical research and add a section by
Virginia Satir. The result is an excellent short course on
co-therapy.--Carl Whitaker, M.D.
As one who has spent his entire career immersed in the practice of
co-therapy, I am delighted to find a cogent and useful book
addressed to this uniquely intimate work relationship....This is an
insightful and helpful book. It gives us threads of specific
wisdom, and a weave that connotes the positiveness of co-therapy as
a hopeful and expansive linking up of two individuals for the
common good. I only wish Virginia Satir, whose chapter is by itself
worth the price of the book, could have gone on and
on....--Augustius Y. Napier in Journal of Family Psychotherapy
- As one who has spent his entire career immersed in the practice
of co-therapy, I am delighted to find a cogent and useful book
addressed to this uniquely intimate work relationship....This is an
insightful and helpful book. --Journal of Family Psychotherapy,
2/17/1991
Ask a Question About this Product More... |