When trying to understand your community it is helpful to recognize that
A. You cannot get moving on your change effort until you have each and every piece of information available on your community.
B. Information gathering and action are two distinct phases.
C. Features like the dimensions or size of the community, key landmarks, places where people gather and other physical characteristics are important things to know about geographic communities.
D. The number of people in the community is all that really matters.
C
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That Transactional analysis threatens to divide us into a tripartite personality that can never know the beauty of being whole is a criticism most likely to be leveled by:
a. behaviorial therapy. c. humanistic therapy. b. contextual therapy. d. psychoanalysis.
Placing a premium on the present moment and how the client develops in the immediacy of the therapy hour is called:
A. Baseline awareness. B. "What and "how" of behavior. C. The creative stance. D. The here and now.
Initial intake interviews:
a. are one of the most commonly used assessment strategies b. should only be focused on gathering client information c. can be conducted effectively with very little training or practice d. are generally conducted with adult clients, but not with children
"There are no universal principles or truths" is a theoretical premise most consistent with:
A. narrative family therapy B. solution-focused family therapy C. experiential family therapy D. none of the above