Understanding
storytelling tests through self theory
Here is the first out of 3-4 posts that take a look
at Prof. Marshall Silverstein's approach to the interpretation of storytelling tests
(I mean tests like TAT, CAT, HTP. These
will be the tests I'll refer to, but Silverstein interprets the Rorschach with
this approach too).
Prof. Marshall Silverstein
The approach is described in this book:
Self psychology and diagnostic assessment: identifying selfobject
functions through psychological testing.
Reprinted 2009 by Routledge
The book is quite interesting. I've read it twice. It adds theoretical depth
to our work with projective tests.
Silverstein draws on Self psychology and shows how we can identify
injuries to the self, lack of self cohesiveness, indications of mirroring,
idealization and twinship needs, compensatory structures and defense mechanisms
(vertical and horizontal splits) in projective tests.
My concise presentation of this approach, part1 of which is here, does not go into details about self psychology, beyond
what's needed to understand its application to projective tests. The presentation is based almost entirely on
Silverstein's book, but I also drew from Zehava Osterweil's book "Open
solutions" (I believe it's published only in Hebrew) and from other
sources.
I'm no expert on this subject and present it
from the viewpoint of an amateur, enthusiastic
reader.
Some points I find
important when working with projective tests:
· In order to draw a well based
conclusion we must see that the phenomena we've identified repeat
themselves over several stories and are not found only in one story. Good assessment practices (of the cognitive
abilities as well) require us not to draw conclusions that are based on a
single finding or on a thin evidence base.
· Each child "speaks" a
different theoretical "language".
Not every child's protocol will "speak" the self theory
language. Some children's protocols lend
themselves to cognitive interpretations and these will be more fruitful than dynamic
or other interpretations.
· Stories can be conceptualized through different theories – family theories, narrative theories
and more - according to the psychologist's taste and
knowledge. It's worth remembering, that an
interpretation is a mirror of the psychologist's personality as much as the
child's. It enlightens the things
the psychologist pays attention to, the things the psychologist finds important
- not only the "objective truth" of the child.
· It's important to think about the
links between the findings from projective tests and from the child's cognitive
tests. It's worthwhile to think how the personality
of the child, revealed to us through his stories, influences the ways in which
the child processes cognitive information, and how the child's cognitive
strengths and weaknesses influence the way he interprets the stimuli in
projective tests.
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