Group Process: Occupational Therapy Tool of Practice
Group Process: Occupational Therapy Tool of Practice
Leader
Leader involvement
involvement Very central Not central Not central
Purposeful
Purposeful activity
activity Very central Not central Not central
Structure
Structure and
and format
format Very central Not central Somewhat
Somewhat central
central
Focus of
Era Group
Involvement
Project Era (1922-1936)
●
Project completion
●
Behaviorally and educationally New skills and attitudes; structure; New skills and attitudes; structure;
oriented here-and-now experiences here-and-now experiences
Developmental Group
Psychoeducational Group
Integrative Group Therapy Structured Five-Stage
Approach
Procedures of
assessing, designing,
planning and
Observation Interaction evaluating, analyzing
and responding, and
documenting
Observation
The leader looks for information about the group’s
process in several areas. All aspects of the group are
considered dynamic and therefore are constantly
changing, which makes observation difficult and
challenging
Observation
Group as system: group process, phase and dynamics
In observing the group’s development, leaders look at the
group’s phase in relation to decision-making patterns,
membership and leadership roles, and the level and type of
participation patterns, such as who initiates communication,
who talks to whom, and the tone of voice members and
leaders use
Observation
Individual member in system
The leader observes the group member in relation to other
members, the leader, and group task. These observations of
group dynamics may be informal or structured around a task
designed to demonstrate certain skills and behaviors, such as
cooperativeness, mobility, attention span, memory,
concentration, and assertiveness.
Depending on the setting and length of treatment, when
Self-disclosure
Empathy
Feedback
Confrontation
Misdirected anger
Subgrouping
Interference outside the group (eg, interruptions from other services, such as
laboratory)
When one of these problems arises, it must be examined separately and
larger program
Groups may also be used for the sole purpose of evaluation
Procedures
Designing
The design is usually written in the form of a group protocol
that includes:
1. Group and, if possible, individual member short- and long-
term goals
2. Selection criteria for membership
3. Group size and composition
4. Group methods, techniques, and activity modalities
5. Time and location of the group meeting and group leaders’
names
6. Referral procedures
Procedures
Planning and evaluating
Evaluation is continuous throughout the group’s existence.
After evaluating each session, the leaders create detailed