Solution Focused Interventions

For use with: parent/carers, children aged 11-15 and young people aged 16-18

Solution Focused Interventions are questions designed to help people explore their strengths and resources, rather than concentrate on their problems and deficits.

When would you use it?

Solution Focused Interventions help a practitioner to discover what a person is already doing which may contribute to the resolution of the problem that they are facing.  The interventions are based around questions that the practitioner asks about what life might be like if the problem was solved. 

The questions can help an individual identify what their goals, or preferred future, will look like when they have overcome their problems or challenges. They help the person notice things in their lives that are going well or those goals that are already being achieved.

Solution Focused Interventions are very appropriate to use with older children, adolescents and adults and can be easily learned.  Using a solution focussed approach is useful when working with children and families affected by neglect, particularly when drawing up a plan with parents and carers about what needs to be achieved in order to overcome concerns.

Throughout any work with a family whereby neglect has been identified as an issue it is essential to recognise progress and identify further actions or work required.

Example Solution focused Interventions and questions

Problem Free Talk

This means talking to a person about things in their life that are not immediately connected with the problem or challenge/s they are facing.  Listening actively to this can tell you a lot about the persons potential, resources and competencies and shows them that you are interested in them as a person.

By listening very carefully you will be able to identify the things that are going well, or times in the past when things have gone better.  Try not to concentrate your listening too much at this point on the problem. Think about strengths and successes and remember these for later use.

"I know a little about your problem but before we discuss it further I would like to find out a bit more about you as a person. What are your interests, hobbies, tell me about your family, etc."

"Tell me about a time in the past before the problem existed? What was life like then?"

Goals/Preferred Future

Helping a person to identify clear goals or a clear description of their preferred future without the problem can be very helpful. This involves questions that concentrate on what life will be like without the problem or challenge. It is important to concentrate on the detail.

What will you notice when the problem is better?
How will things be different when the problem is better?
What will you be doing differently when things are better?
What will you be doing instead?
How will your parents/friends tell that things are going better?
How will others tell when the problem is better? Tell me more about that


Always ask for detail and remember to ask “what else?” Well-described goals will be positive.  Describe what is wanted rather than what is not wanted and can be broken down into small, achievable steps, be specific and observable and realistic. It is useful to use language which implies a positive outcome, for example:

“How will you do that”, rather than “Why will you do that?”
“When this happens”, rather than “If this happens...”
“What will you be doing”, rather than “What would you be doing?”
“What will be happening”, rather than “What won’t be happening?”

Identifying exceptions to the problem and how they are already coping

Very few problems are present all the time. In fact, most problems only occur occasionally. There are usually many times when the problem is not happening at all or is happening to a lesser degree.

Helping the person to notice these times can help reduce the feeling of being overwhelmed by the problem and can help identify things they or others are already doing to solve the problem.  Remember to ask for detail, “What else?” and “Tell me more.”

Tell me about times when the problem is less troubling or when it is not happening.
Tell me about the times when you cope better with the problem.
What is different about the times when the problem is better?
When things are tough, how do you cope?
Tell me what has worked in the past even if only for a short time.

The use of scales is a flexible technique that can be used to help a person identify movement in their problem or challenge. It is especially helpful when the person is struggling to identify goals or exceptions to their problem.

Imagine a scale from 0 to 10. 10 represents how you want things to be when the problem is solved and 0 is the opposite.
What number are you on the scale right now?
What number were you at when the problem was at its worst?
What will you notice if you moved up one or two numbers towards your goal?


If the individual describes themselves at a very low number you can ask questions like:

How do you cope when things are so difficult?
Who is helping you to cope?
What is stopping you from moving down one number?
Describe the different changes you will notice as you move up each number on the scale?


As you can see questions like these encourage the young person to imagine change and to focus on their strengths and coping skills. With younger children it is useful to use more playful and imaginative scales involving pictures. You can be as imaginative as you like with the scales and adapt them to the person, their age and their interests. For example, you could draw a set of steps or a mountain to climb.

Feedback

Giving feedback, i.e: summarising what the person has said and feeding it back to them, is a very useful technique. It informs the individual that you are listening to them and allows them to correct you if you have picked up the wrong end of the stick. It can also be used to remind the person of their strengths and resources.  The feedback should be specific, affirming, reassuring and, wherever possible, complimentary. 

That sounded very impressive the way you managed to get yourself to school when the problem was so difficult. You are obviously a young person with a lot of resilience to have managed so well in the circumstances.

Things to remember:

  • Make sure you don’t ignore the problem completely. This can lead to the individual feeling that they are not being listened to or that you think their problems are trivial

  • It is important to get a balance between listening to their 'problem talk' and being aware of their strengths and resourcefulness

  • Don’t rely on solution-focused techniques completely. If you are too solution focused in your approach you can sometimes miss important information about distressing events in the person’s life, for example, situations that they are not in control of like bullying or abuse.

A copy of this Tool is available on request

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