Christian Prep(information below from www.prepinc.com)
First and
foremost, Christian PREP is a program reflecting a clear commitment to
traditional Christianity and Christian truth. The model of integration
employed here gives first place to the revelation of scripture and second
place to sound research. If revelation and research are in conflict,
revelation wins out. The fact is, however, that revelation and sound
research are consistently and amazingly consistent in those areas where
they speak to the same phenomena. This has been one of the most exciting
aspects of bringing this project together.
Christian PREP (The Prevention and Relationship Enhancement Program) is
the culmination of years of work by many colleagues on understanding what
makes for great marriages and what causes marital failure and breakdown.
The program is founded on a Christian model and teaching on marriage, with
an integration of solid research on marriage and relationships. The model
of integration we employ is described below after we present some history
of the PREP program in general.
The Prevention and Relationship Enhancement Program (PREP®) is a
research-based approach to teaching couples how to communicate
effectively, work as a team to solve problems, manage conflicts without
damaging closeness, and preserve and enhance love, commitment, and
friendship. The PREP Approach is based on 25 years of research in the
field of marital health and success, with much of the specific research
conducted at the University of Denver over the past 20 years. Drs. Markman,
Stanley, Blumberg, and a host of colleagues and research assistants, have
been studying what happy couples do right and what unhappy couples do
wrong. One focus of this work has been on how to take this information and
teach couples skills and attitudes associated with marital success.
PREP was designed to teach couples communication and problem solving
skills found to be linked to effective marital functioning. It employs
techniques from behavioral marital therapy (e.g., Jacobson & Margolin,
1979) and ideas similar to some other communication-training marital
programs (e.g., Guerney, 1977).