Created by fearerless
over 9 years ago
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Question | Answer |
In general, most schools of feminist and multicultural counseling will consider all of the following aspects of a person's experience: | Effect of gender, culture and relationship |
According to systemic counselors, the symptoms clients present with in counseling are viewed as: | Related to systemic dynamics |
The following statement: "At the end of the session, the client cannot say which 'side' the counselor was on," is an example of a counselor successfully achieving __________. | Neutrality |
Systemic counselors view the presenting problem not as an individual problem but a __________one, specifically an interactional one, even if the counselor is working with an individual. | Relational |
One of the most thoroughly researched family systems approaches that empirically validated treatment for treating couples is: | Emotionally Focused Therapy |
Feminist counselors see women as developing the self: | In and through relationships |
Systemic approaches are a set of theories that conceptualize an individual's symptoms as arising where? | Within family and relational dynamics |
The experience a client has, in which he or she rejects parts of self, becoming disconnected from the self as well as others, is referred to as: | Internalized oppression |
The purpose of enactments in systemic counseling is what? | To observe and restructure couple and family interactions in your office |
Feminist counselors use assertiveness training to help empower clients. The goal of assertiveness training is for clients to: | Attend to both the needs of self and others with balance |
Family systems counselors are fundamentally strengths-based. This means focusing on each of the following: | Advocating against labeling families as dysfunctional, Focusing on religious beliefs or hobbies to develop interventions, Recognizing the family as supportive and protective to individuals |
Shifts in family structure, during the early stages of counseling, which seem like radical change but the underlying family rules remain the same, refer to what? | First-order change |
According to feminist and multicultural counselors, the desire for __________ is the primary motivating factor, and fundamental to an individual's sense of well-being. | Connection |
One of the strengths of systems theory and it application for working with diverse populations is its __________ approach. | Non-pathologizing |
Gender-role analysis, a defining intervention used by feminist counselors, involves: | Asking questions of clients to help identify cultural rules from multiple contexts that may be interacting with the current problem |
An example of a relational system within which systemic counselors view their clients would be: | Mother, father, siblings, Online communities, church |
According to feminist counselors, the personal is political, refers to the interconnectedness of a person's internal reality with political issues from the broader social context. This is true for: | men, women, transgender |
__________ refers to when a system restructures its homeostasis in response to positive feedback, and the rules that govern the system fundamentally shift. | Second-order change |
A major philosophy of feminist counseling approaches places societal issues at the heart of treatment. This is consistent with which of the following approaches? | Narrative |
Feminist counselors promote social activism and social justice through their own actions and with their clients. This can be accomplished by: | Supporting clients' finding ways to make a difference in their communities in ways that work for the client |
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