Publication | Open Access
Motivation and Autonomy in Counseling, Psychotherapy, and Behavior Change: A Look at Theory and Practice 1ψ7
410
Citations
179
References
2010
Year
Family MedicineCounselingEducationMental HealthRelative-autonomy ContinuumMulticultural CounselingAutonomySelf-determination Theory TaxonomyPsychologySocial SciencesClinical PsychologyHelping RelationshipTherapeutic RelationshipMental Health CounselingBehavioral SciencesCommunity PsychologyMotivationBehavior TherapyPractice 1ψ7Individual TherapyBehavior Change (Individual)Therapeutic ModelCounselor EducationProfessional CounselingTreatment GoalBehavior ChangeProfessional Counseling OrientationGroup CounselingPsychotherapy
Motivation has received increasing attention across counseling approaches, presumably because clients’ motivation is key for treatment effectiveness. The authors define motivation using a self-determination theory taxonomy that conceptualizes motivation along a relative-autonomy continuum. The authors apply the taxonomy in discussing how various counseling approaches address client motivation and autonomy, both in theory and in practice. The authors also consider the motivational implications of nonspecific factors such as therapeutic alliance. Across approaches, the authors find convergence around the idea that clients’ autonomy should be respected and collaborative engagement fostered. The authors also address ethical considerations regarding respect for autonomy and relations of autonomy to multicultural counseling. The authors conclude that supporting autonomy is differentially grounded in theories and differentially implemented in approaches. Specifically, outcome-oriented treatments tend to consider motivation a prerequisite for treatment and emphasize transparency and up-front consent; process-oriented treatments tend to consider motivation a treatment aspect and give less emphasis to transparency and consent.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1