“…Identifying strengths and building on them promote a sense of self-efficacy and facilitate working toward change and improvements in children’s well-being ( Ayón, Aisenberg, & Erera, 2010 ; Toros & Falch-Eriksen, 2021 ; Van Hook, 2019 ). Furthermore, solution-focused techniques, such as exploring exceptions, coping, scaling, and the miracle question could be useful for families in terms of resilience, strengths and resources ( Cowger, 1994 ; Oliver, 2017 ), empowerment, motivation ( Kemp, Marcenko, Lyons, & Kruzich, 2014 ; Lwin, Versanov, Cheung, Goodman, & Andrews, 2014 ; Toros & LaSala, 2018 ), and effective coping strategies ( Toros, LaSala, & Medar, 2016 ). As solution-focused questions are found to improve communication between social workers and clients ( Bannink, 2007 ; de Jong & Berg, 2001 ; Oliver & Charles, 2015 ), they also have the potential to improve communication between family members.…”