Counseling Theory - Chapters 10/13

Descripción

Feminist Counseling and Systemic Family Counseling
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Resumen del Recurso

Pregunta Respuesta
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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