Surprised by the number of program possibilities there were to achieve the goal of getting liquor out of her life, Karen decided to try some of them. She went to an open meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous, attended a meeting of a women's lifestyle-issues group, visited the hospital that had a residential treatment program, and joined-up for a two-week trial physical-fitness program at a YMCA. She
tried them out and then discussed them with her counselor. What technique for strategy selection was she using?
a. strategy sampling
b. experiential learning
c. prompt and fade
d. the balance-sheet method
a
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In the highly successful TAC program for high school adolescents in Texas, are specially trained to work with small groups of adolescents and are supervised carefully by counselors
a. parents b. teachers c. community volunteers d. teachers and administrators
As the size of a group increases, ordinarily
a. Group cohesion will increase b. Sub-groupings will occur c. Rules will be enforced more stringently d. Resistance will increase
Which of the following is incorrect from the point of view of cultural intentionality? a. clients exist in a multicultural situation and context
b. Interviewing and counseling do not exist in a vacuum. c. becoming cultural competent is basic to interviewing and counseling practice. d. cultural intentional counselors can solve all of their clients' issues in a few sessions.
In the context of the methods of data collection, the rationale behind projective techniques is that:
a. human interaction provides an added advantage whileevaluating participant responses. b. participants' responses to ambiguous stimuli will reveal some facet of their personality. c. respondents rate characteristics of participants or events of interest. d. participants assess the degree to which some characteristic is present.