Inference:

a. Reaching an arbitrary negative conclusion when there is little or no evidence to support it, when the evidence is circumstantial, vague, or unclear, or when there is evidence to the contrary.
b. Relating a negative event or situation to oneself without the adequate causal evidence to make the connection.
c. Focusing on the negative in a situation, ignoring other positive (sometimes more salient) features, and viewing the entire experience as negative based on the selective view.
d. Drawing a rule or conclusion based upon one or two isolated incidents and applying the concept across the board to related and unrelated situations.


a. Reaching an arbitrary negative conclusion when there is little or no evidence to support it, when the evidence is circumstantial, vague, or unclear, or when there is evidence to the contrary.

Counseling

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Marriage and family therapists may be called to provide testimony in court. One role in which family therapists are asked to testify about probable causes and recommendations in regard to family members is called:

A. child custody evaluator B. expert witness C. court ordered witness D. court advocate

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Which of the following is NOT true about the Stanford-Binet?

a. It is probably the most well-known individual test of intelligence. b. It can be given to individuals between the ages of 2 and 90+ years. c. It measures verbal and nonverbal intelligence across five different factors. d. It has been criticized for showing meager reliability and validity estimates.

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Brief therapy advocates attempting to change a family system rather than helping the family make changes within the existing system. This objective calls for

Counseling

AMHCA clearly states that in Section ___ of its code that the organization does not hear or rule on ethical matters

a. I b. II c. III d. IV

Counseling