Which information concerning his or her client should a therapist gather?

What will be an ideal response?


It is often believed that therapy should include recapitulating one’s entire life. However, therapy
should be more focused than this, and the therapist should primarily focus on information that can help
the therapeutic process. The therapist should understand the client’s beliefs concerning himself or
herself, his or her attitudes toward other people, his or her recent history, and details of the problem.
The past is important only as an influence on the client’s current picture of the world. The client’s
construction of the world should be understood in order to be addressed. It is also important to
understand the client’s opinion about what might have caused current issues. After that, the therapist
should be able to recognize and address underlying beliefs or schemas.

Counseling

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Intake interviews

a. are not central to the assessment process. b. provide information used in diagnostic formulation. c. require more time than psychological tests. d. All of the above.

Counseling

In regard to the stages of change, which stage describes when a client has made the necessary changes in their lives?

a. Action b. Preparation c. Maintenance d. Contemplation

Counseling

What attachment issues are psychologically maltreated children at higher risk for?

a. extreme attachment b. insecure attachment c. lack of attachment d. hyperattachment

Counseling

What term did Linehan introduce to the practice of cognitive-behavioral therapy?

a. thinking errors b. mindfulness c. irrational beliefs d. natural consequences e. stimuli

Counseling