What is the client’s role in choice theory?

What will be an ideal response?


The client’s role in choice therapy is to develop a workable plan to get what he or she wants. The plan focuses on what clients can control and can implement on their own. The therapist empowers clients by emphasizing what is in their control. Clients’ plans must be simple and contain doing very specific behaviors. A client may not be able to get his girlfriend to go back with him, but he can do other things that might help him to get over this experience, such as dating other girls. The client’s detailed plan might involve becoming a member of an online dating service and committing to filling out the application, meeting three prospective dates, and so on. A client’s plan may form a counseling contract. In addition, clients must be willing to learn the basic axioms and language of reality/choice therapy.

Counseling

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Which of the following tasks characterize Stage III of the helping process?

a. Help clients develop new perspectives and reframe their stories. b. Help clients discover possibilities for a better future. c. Help clients craft problem-managing goals. d. Help clients pull strategies together into a manageable plan.

Counseling

In the alternating-treatment design, the treatment effect is replicated ______.

A. in the second treatment phase B. in other people C. in other settings D. every time it is introduced

Counseling

When involuntary clients are required to sign documents waiving their privacy before beginning counseling sessions,

a. counselors should refuse to counsel these clients who have been forced into counseling. b. the client in these situations is the agency forcing the client into counseling, not the client himself or herself. c. counselors then have no responsibility to maintain the client's privacy. d. counselors should warn clients that they should never say anything in counseling sessions that may put them in a difficult situation with the person or agency that has mandated their counseling sessions. e. counselors should carefully explain to clients the limits of their privacy within the counseling relationship.

Counseling

Courtesy, mutual respect and responsibility are all examples of

a. Roles b. Norms c. Group structure d. Status

Counseling