According to the textbook authors, EMDR's central processes of change involve:
a. consciousness raising and catharsis.
b. catharsis and cognitive restructuring.
c. consciousness raising and counterconditioning.
d. counterconditioning and cognitive restructuring.
D
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Regarding the issue of adjustment versus transcendence, existential therapy would most likely say which of the following?
a. Alienation is the condition of the mature person as long as society remains insane. b. Healthy people are committed to helping society transcend its present level of functioning in order to become a more perfect social system. c. The forces that need to be transcended are not those of society, but rather those of self- destructive life scripts. d. The only way a life based on adjustment might be healthy is if the society a person is adjusting to is basically honest.
Each organization has a culture which is often termed the psychosocial subsystem. This subsystem is involved with:
a. transmitting the commonly held beliefs about the organization b. socializing new workers c. informally influencing behavior d. all of the above
When making a report of child abuse or neglect, the counselor should be prepared to provide all of the following except:
a. Name of the child, parents, and perpetrator b. Client assessment history and diagnosis c. Addresses of the subjects of the report d. When and where the incident occurred
Which of the following statements about giving or receiving gifts is FALSE?
A. Lavish gifts certainly present an ethical problem; yet, we can go too far in the direction of trying to be ethical and actually damage the therapeutic relationship. B. It is important to recognize when accepting a gift from a client is clinically contraindicated and that you be willing to explore this with your client. C. In working with culturally diverse client populations, clinicians often discover that they need to engage in boundary crossing to enhance the counseling relationship. D. It could be more problematic to accept a gift at a later stage of a counseling relationship.