What are the cognitive therapist’s goals?

What will be an ideal response?


The fundamental goal of cognitive therapy is to remove or to eliminate biases in clients’ thinking that prevent them from functioning optimally. The therapist focuses on the manner in which clients process information, especially as such processing is used to maintain maladaptive feelings and behavior. In cognitive therapy, goal establishment is usually a joint venture. Therapists help clients to become specific in delineating their goals as well as in prioritizing them. When clients’ goals are specific and concrete, the therapist is in a better position to choose treatment techniques that will help them to change their belief systems, feelings, and behaviors.

Counseling

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The "who told you?" technique is used on Jane by the worker to:

A) ?point out how she deludes herself. B) ?give her a rationale for starting new behaviors that lead to compassion satisfaction. C) ?as a way of safely projecting her anger onto significant others through the countertransference phenomenon. D) ?All of the answers are good reasons the technique is used.

Counseling

Behavior therapy was different from previous therapies for all of the following reasons except ______.

A. it incorporated a theory of learning B. it argued that environmental cues were important C. it was difficult to empirically study D. it contributed to dialectical behavior therapy and acceptance and commitment therapy

Counseling

The _______ of all helping professions mandate that you must do something if a member is a danger to himself or herself or someone else.

Fill in the blank(s) with the appropriate word(s).

Counseling

The central issue in therapy, according to the existential view, is

a. resistance. b. freedom and responsibility. c. transference. d. experiencing feelings.

Counseling