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Systems Theory study group

Systems Theory study group. Overview and general systems theory. Systems theory study group. What are theories? Ways of conceptualizing behaviors, relationships, and problems Represents your worldview – your way of making sense out of things

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Systems Theory study group

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  1. Systems Theory study group Overview and general systems theory

  2. Systems theory study group • What are theories? • Ways of conceptualizing behaviors, relationships, and problems • Represents your worldview – your way of making sense out of things • Ideas and concepts which form the basis for the various models which we study and use • Philosophical approach to therapy, relationships, and problems

  3. Systems theory study group • Why are they important? • Your “house” is built upon one or more theoretical approaches • How you choose to intervene and provide therapeutic services are guided by your particular philosophical understandings • Your choice(s) of model(s) will be informed by your theoretical underpinnings • Therapy requires a strong understanding of theories • Helps you meet the client’s needs • Is required for passing the national exam

  4. Systems theory study group • How many theories are there? • That’s a great question • That depends upon who you ask • There are ways to conceptualize these theories into various categories • Ingoldsby et al. (2004) highlighted 9 theories related to families

  5. Systems Theory study group

  6. Systems Theory study group This is the basic format for what you might want to include in your own chart. This will help you track the various models and the significant data related to each.

  7. Systems theory study group • Tonight we will discuss general systems theory because it is the foundational core of much of the rest of family systems theory

  8. Systems theory study group • General systems theory • Derived from the work of Bertalanffy • Viewed the world from a biological perspective • Attempted to give meaning to how biological systems operate • Teaches us that the whole is greater than the parts • Components are interdependent (change in 1 causes change in others) • AKA: Systems theory, Open systems theory, Systemic theory

  9. Systems theory study group • General systems theory • Systems theory was proposed in the 1936 by the biologist Ludwig von Bertalanffy, and further developed by Ross Ashby. von Bertalanffy was both reacting against reductionism and attempting to revive the unity of science. He emphasized that real systems are open to, and interact with, their environments, and that they can acquire qualitatively new properties through emergence, resulting in continual evolution. Rather than reducing an entity (e.g. the human body) to the properties of its parts or elements (e.g. organs or cells), systems theory focuses on the arrangement of and relations between the parts which connect them into a whole (cf. holism). This particular organization determines a system, which is independent of the concrete substance of the elements (e.g. particles, cells, transistors, people, etc). • Thus, the same concepts and principles of organization underlie the different disciplines (physics, biology, technology, sociology, etc.), providing a basis for their unification. Systems concepts include: system-environment boundary, input, output, process, state, hierarchy, goal-directedness, and information. • An information system is an example of the interaction of multiple elements as envisioned by GST. • Source: http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/SYSTHEOR.html

  10. Systems theory study group • General systems theory • All systems have common elements. These are: input output throughput or process feedback control environment goal

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  20. Systems theory study group • Resources • http://quizlet.com/2873390/new

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