Engaging Clients from a Strength-Based, Solution-Focused
Perspective
The University of Pittsburgh
School of Social Work
Pennsylvania Child Welfare
Training Program
Learning Objectives:
Identify the conditions for establishing effective engagement with clients;
Connect the engagement process with the appropriate application of protective authority to establish the collaborative/protective partnership;
Identify the elements of the solution-focused intervention model that distinguish it from the more typical problem-focused approach;
Learning Objectives (continued):
Identify seven key solution-focused strategies; Identify the appropriate use of the following skills:
identifying strengths in a problem situation, exploring past successes, finding and using exceptions to the problem, facilitating a positive vision of the future, scaling questions, encouraging commitment and developing action steps; and
Identify opportunities to implement the solution-focused interviewing and intervention approach with clients.
Competencies:
301-3: The Child Welfare Professional is skilled in a variety of interviewing and casework techniques, and can conduct individual and family interviews.
301-4: The Child Welfare Professional can implement problem-solving strategies, can apply these strategies to family’s problems and needs, and can teach family members to use problem-solving methods to resolve family problems.
Professional Practice
Clear Mission Shared Values Practice Standards Relevant Knowledge/Skill Results-oriented Self-assessment Ongoing Improvement
Strengths What people have learned about
themselves, others and their world Personal qualities, traits and virtues What people know about the world
around them The talents people have Cultural and personal stories and lore Pride The community
Types of Strengths
Mitigating Strengths: protect children from
threats to safety Risk Reducing Strengths: reduce the
likelihood of maltreatment in the future Well-being related Strengths: serve to
enhance or support the family’s overall quality
of life Neutral Strengths: positive qualities or
conditions in the family that do not directly act to
mitigate safety threats, reduce risk or enhance well-being
Engagement
Engage: to obtain or contract for; to obtain and hold the attention of; to pledge or promise; to interlock or cause to mesh
(The American Heritage Dictionary).
Engagement: Process & Outcome
Engagement is both a process and an outcome.
It requires the effective and balanced use of helping skills and protective authority
It produces an ongoing worker/client relationship that results in the pursuit and accomplishment of agreed upon goals
Promoting Effective Engagement
Tuning-into Self and Others Focused listening Clarification of role and
purpose Respect Clear and accurate response
to client questions Honesty Dependability Identification and support of
client strengths
Seeking to understand the client’s point of view
Culturally sensitive practice Connecting agency goals
with client goals Investment in client
success Outcomes-oriented practice Regular feedback Confrontation Demand for work
Promoting Effective Engagement
Tuning-into Self and Others Focused listening Clarification of role and
purpose Respect Clear and accurate
response to client questions
Honesty Dependability Identification and support of
client strengths
Seeking to understand the client’s point of view
Culturally sensitive practice Connecting agency goals
with client goals Investment in client success Outcomes-oriented practice Regular feedback Confrontation Demand for work
Protective Authority
Protective Authority is the application of helping and/or coercive strategies that result in client acceptance of intervention and effective client engagement leading to the child safety, reduction of risk of maltreatment, promotion of well-being and timely permanence.
And/or
Protective Authority is a Continuum that
Requires Balance and Flexibility
Clarifying/Helping
Clarifying/Helping
Confronting/Forced Choice
Confronting/Forced Choice
Police/ Courts:Removal/ TPR
Police/ Courts:Removal/ TPR
Low Moderate High
Balance/Flexibility = Engagement &
Protective Partnership
Avoiding Authority Extremes
“Nice” Stance: submissive Concern: Conflict Client potential:
Ambivalent Authority: Minimizes Goal for client:
cooperation Style: inconsistent
Avoiding Authority Extremes
“Tough” Stance: superior Concern: Loss of control Client potential: Pessimistic Authority: Heavy Goal for client: compliance Style: inflexible
Solution-Focused Core Principles
If what you are doing doesn’t work, stop doing it and do something else.
If what you are doing is working, do more of it.
7 Key Solution-focused Strategies
1. Identifying strengths
in a problem situation.
2. Exploring past successes.
3. Finding & using exceptions to the problem.
4. Facilitating a positive
vision of the future.
7 Key Solution-focused Strategies
5. Scaling questions.
6. Encouraging commitment.
7. Developing Action Steps
Solution-Building Questions 1. Tell me about the times when this problem is a
little bit better?
2. How did you make this happen? What else?
3. What are you doing differently during those times when things are a little bit better?
4. What would your best friend (mother, child, etc) tell you when things are going a little bit better for you?
Problem Model vs. Solution Model
The Problem-focused Model The practitioner is the expert.
Practitioner must figure out the type of client problem and the related solution.
The “Problem” is objectively real.
The job of the professional is to know about various problems, have assessment procedures and techniques for intervention.
Problem Model vs. Solution Model
The Solution-focused Model The client is the expert about his/her life.
Practitioner must facilitate client solution building.
Solutions emerge without connection to the specific related problem.
The “problem” does not exist apart from the client as a whole person in context.
The job of the professional is to understand the direction that the client wants to go and identify the supporting strengths.
Types of Useful Questions: Exceptions
Exceptions are those occasions in clients’ lives when their problems could have occurred but did not – or at least were less severe.
Exception questions focus on who, what, when and where (the conditions that helped the exception to occur) - NOT WHY; exceptions should be related to client goals.
Types of Useful Questions: Coping
Coping questions are related in a way to exploring for exceptions. They attempt to help the client shift his/her focus away from the problem elements and toward what the client is doing to survive the painful or stressful circumstances.
Types of Useful Questions: Scaling
Scaling questions invite the clients to put their observations, impressions, and predictions on a scale from 0 to 10, with “0” being no chance, and “10” being every chance.
Questions need to be specific, citing specific times and circumstances.
Types of Useful Questions: Indirect or Relationship
Indirect/Relationship questions invite the client to consider how others might feel or respond to some aspect of the client’s life, behavior or future changes.
Indirect questions can be useful in asking the client to reflect on narrow or faulty perceptions without the worker directly challenging those perceptions or behaviors.
Types of Useful Questions: Miracle
The “Miracle Question” is the opening piece of the process of developing well-formed goals.
It gives clients permission to think about an unlimited range of possibilities for change.
It begins to move the focus away from their current and past problems and toward a more satisfying life.
Posing the Miracle Question “Now, I want to ask you a strange question.
Suppose that while you are sleeping tonight and the entire house is quiet, a miracle happens. The miracle is that the problem for which you sought out assistance is solved. However, because you are sleeping, you don’t know that the miracle has happened. So, when you wake up tomorrow morning, what will be different that will tell you that a miracle has happened and the problem is solved?”
(adapted from de Shazer, 1988)
Follow-up Questions to the Miracle Question
Through follow-up questions, the interviewer further extends and amplifies the impact of the miracle by a series of questions designed to guide the client in exploring the implications of the miracle in the client’s life.
“What might others notice about you that would tell them that the miracle has happened, that things are different or better?”
“Have there been times when you have seen pieces of this miracle happen?”
HIGH AUTHORITY, DIRECTIVE APPROACH
Problem
Wagon
ASFA GOALS:
•Safety
•Permanence
•Well-being
•Timeliness
NON-COERSIVE ENGAGEMENT
Strengths/Problem
Wagon
ASFA GOALS:
•Safety
•Permanence
•Well-being
•Timeliness
ENGAGEMENT + SOLUTION-FOCUSED
Solution
Wagon
ASFA GOALS:
•Safety
•Permanence
•Well-being
•Timeliness
Creating Our Vision of a Positive Future
“Now I want to ask you a strange question. Suppose that while you are sleeping tonight and the entire house is quiet, a miracle happens.
The miracle is that you have and are able to perform at a high level the skills we covered in this training. And you are capable of managing the clients and situations you identified as challenging. However, because you are sleeping, you don’t know that the miracle has happened.
So, when you wake up tomorrow morning, what will be different that will tell you that a miracle has happened?”
WHAT SBSFA CAN & CAN’T DO
No model can give you more time to do your job. However, the SBSFA can help to focus your time and energy in the direction of behaviors and tasks that are sharply focused on the mission of child welfare, on unit performance and the most critical elements of your role.
*BE CURIOUS *BE PATIENT *GROW YOUR COMPETENCIES *TRY OUT NEW KNOWLEDGE &
SKILLS
Top Related