“…It may likewise be argued that there are issues specific to marriage and family counseling that might not be readily addressed in a general counselor education curriculum. Several authors have documented unique issues including treating the entire family unit, imposing therapist values, manipulating the family for therapeutic benefit, making decisions on marital status, balancing family and individual needs, convening all members of the family, determining the amount of intrasystem stress to allow and create, and identifying the client within the system (Beamish, Navin, & Davidson, 1994;Corey et al, 1998;Smith, Carlson, Stevens-Smith, & Dennison, 1995). The changing definitions of family, marriage, and couples beyond the traditional also call into question marriage and family counselors' values and approaches (Janson & Steigerwald, 2002).…”