Deck 7: Person-Centred Therapy

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Question
The person-centred therapist generally does not find traditional assessment and diagnosis:

A) as a useful tool for case conceptualisation.
B) as a meaningful way of understanding of a client's psychological state.
C) to be useful because these procedures encourage an external and expert perspective on the client.
D) as a necessary process that does not affect the course of therapy.
Use Space or
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Question
Which of the following is not considered a necessary and sufficient condition for change in the person-centred framework?

A) Unconditional positive regard
B) Creative expression
C) Accurate empathetic understanding
D) Congruence
Question
Which of the following is not a key concept of the person-centred approach?

A) The focus is on experiencing the immediate moment.
B) In a climate of safety in the therapeutic session, the client comes to realise that there are more authentic ways of being.
C) The client is primarily responsible for the direction of therapy.
D) The focus is on exploration of a client's past.
Question
The that recently has emerged shares many concepts on the healthy side of human existence with the humanistic approach.

A) positive psychology movement
B) object relations approach
C) dialectical behaviour therapy approach
D) applied behaviour analysis movement
Question
A potential limitation of the person-centred approach is:

A) their view of assessment and diagnosis.
B) that some students-in-training and practitioners may have a tendency to be very supportive of clients without being challenging.
C) shortcomings of the studies of the approach.
D) the continual evolution of the approach leads to unclear therapeutic principles.
Question
Which statement is true of the person-centred approach?

A) Therapists should give advice when clients need it.
B) The techniques a therapist uses are less important than his or her attitudes.
C) Therapists should function largely as teachers.
D) Therapy is primarily the therapist's responsibility.
Question
The technique of reflection involves the therapist:

A) restating the client's words verbatim.
B) sharing his or her genuine emotional response with the client.
C) mirroring the client's emotional experience of a particular situation.
D) bringing an actual mirror into the session and having a client look at himself or herself in the mirror.
Question
In order for a therapist to communicate 'accurate empathic understanding' the counsellor must:

A) have experienced a situation very similar to the client's current predicament.
B) clarify details and facts relevant to the client's experiences.
C) feel a deep sense of warmth toward the client.
D) connect emotionally to the client's subjective world.
Question
Thabo, an eight-year-old boy, was recently removed from his home because he was being physically and sexually abused by his father. In accordance with Maslow's framework, which needs took precedence?

A) Physical and safety needs
B) Belonging and love
C) Esteem from self and others
D) Self-actualisation
Question
Which of the statements below regarding motivational interviewing MI) is not accurate?

A) MI was initially designed as a brief intervention for problem drinking.
B) MI stresses client self-responsibility and promotes an invitational style for working cooperatively with clients to generate alternative solutions to behavioural problems.
C) MI was developed by Maslow in the late 1970s after he created his theory on self-actualisation.
D) MI therapists avoid arguing with clients and reframe resistance as a healthy response.
Question
Which of the following is not a characteristic of the person-centred approach?

A) The focus is on the phenomenological world of the client.
B) It is supported by evidence from ongoing research.
C) The client-centred approach emphasised the role of the therapist as a facilitator of growth and honoured the inherent power of the client.
D) Emphasis is given to developing a contract for therapy.
Question
What is a limitation of person-centred therapy?

A) The approach does not make use of research to study the process or outcomes of therapy.
B) The therapist has more power to manipulate and control the client than is true of most other therapies.
C) The approach does not emphasise the role of techniques in creating change in the client's behaviour.
D) The client is not given enough responsibility to direct the course of his or her own therapy.
Question
Characteristics of a self-actualised person include all of the following, except:

A) welcomes uncertainty in his or her life.
B) has a capacity for deep and intense interpersonal relationships.
C) has artificial dualities within himself or herself.
D) is spontaneous and creative.
Question
The person-centred approach's view of human nature:

A) views people as basically competitive.
B) states that humans are driven by irrational forces.
C) emphasises clients' abilities to engage their own resources to act in their world with others.
D) assumes that, while humans have the potential for growth, we tend to remain stagnant.
Question
Person-centred therapy is best described as a:

A) completed 'school' of counselling.
B) fixed set of therapeutic principles.
C) systematic set of behavioural techniques.
D) philosophy of how the therapy process develops.
Question
One point of disagreement between existential and humanistic thought involves:

A) a respect for the client's subjective experience.
B) a trust in the capacity of the client to make positive choices.
C) an emphasis on freedom.
D) the idea of an innate self-actualising drive.
Question
What is the most important factor related to progress in person-centred therapy?

A) Defining concrete and measurable goals
B) The therapist's technical skills
C) The relationship between the client and therapist
D) The therapist's ability to think logically and to scientifically solve problems
Question
The person-centred therapist is best described as a:

A) facilitator.
B) teacher.
C) human engineer.
D) friend.
Question
In applying the person-centred approach to crisis intervention, therapists should do all of the following, except:

A) communicate a deep sense of understanding.
B) provide genuine support and warmth.
C) use a more structured approach and provide clients with some direction.
D) do not give the individual the opportunity to fully express themselves.
Question
Person-centred therapy is:

A) an action-oriented approach to therapy.
B) a humanistic approach to therapy.
C) an existential approach to therapy.
D) a deterministic approach to therapy.
Question
Therapists using motivational interviewing strategies view clients as:

A) opponents to be defeated.
B) allies who play a major role in their present and future success.
C) victims of their own psychopathology who need to be liberated from their pain and dysfunction.
D) people who are lazy and need a powerful incentive to change their ways.
Question
Carl Rogers's original emphasis was on reflection of feelings expressed by the client.
Question
From Carl Rogers's perspective the client/therapist relationship is characterised by:

A) a sense of equality.
B) the transference relationship.
C) the therapist functioning as the expert.
D) a clearly defined contract that specifies what clients will talk about in the sessions.
Question
In the 1960s and 1970s Rogers did a great deal to encourage the development of:

A) organisational management seminars.
B) private colleges aimed at training person-centred therapists.
C) student-centred teaching and encounter groups.
D) the National Training Laboratories and T-groups.
Question
The is a directional process of striving toward realisation, fulfilment, autonomy, and self-determination.

A) congruence tendency
B) empathic understanding
C) actualising tendency
D) actualising understanding
Question
According to Rogerian therapy, an 'internal source of evaluation' is defined as:

A) internalising the validation one receives from others.
B) looking more to oneself for the answers to the problems of existence.
C) going on one's instincts when judging the behaviour of others.
D) a neurotic tendency to be self-critical.
Question
Concerning research on psychotherapy and Carl Rogers, which of the following is not true?

A) Rogers stated his concepts as testable hypotheses and submitted them to research.
B) Rogers opened the field for psychotherapy research.
C) Rogers inspired others to conduct extensive research on counselling process and outcome.
D) Rogers did not conduct the research himself.
Question
Which of the following is the correct order in terms of the historical development of Carl Rogers's approach to counselling?

A) Client-centred to person-centred to nondirective
B) Client-centred to nondirective to person-centred
C) Nondirective to client-centred to person-centred
D) Nondirective to person-centred to client-centred
Question
Which of the following is not true about Carl Rogers?

A) He was raised with strict religious standards in his home.
B) He developed cognitive therapy.
C) At one point in his life, he was preparing to enter the ministry.
D) He made a contribution toward achieving world peace.
Question
Which of the following is not true about the most recent trends in person-centred therapy?

A) It could be referred to as holistic therapy.
B) Acceptance and clarification are the main techniques used.
C) It emphasises an increased involvement of the therapist as a person.
D) It allows the therapist greater freedom to be active in the therapeutic relationship.
Question
From a person-centred perspective, the best source of knowledge about the client is the:

A) individual client.
B) therapist.
C) client's family.
D) therapeutic relationship.
Question
A factor that distinguishes the person-centred approach to group counselling from other approaches is the:

A) therapist's role as facilitator.
B) length of treatment.
C) focus on creating a collaborative spirit.
D) focus on building genuine relationships among members.
Question
Carl Rogers's position on confronting the client is that:

A) confrontation is to be avoided at all costs.
B) confrontation causes clients to stop growing.
C) confrontation reflects that the therapist has a need to be in control.
D) confrontation or resistance must be responded to in a non-confrontational manner.
Question
Which of the following personal characteristics of the therapist is most important, according to Carl Rogers?

A) Unconditional positive regard
B) Acceptance
C) Genuineness
D) Accurate empathic understanding
Question
Philani has been confronted by family members and friends about his excessive gambling. Despite their attempts to help him, he insists that they are overreacting and that he has everything under control. He does not feel the need to alter his behaviours. Philani is at which stage of change?

A) Precontemplation
B) Contemplation
C) Preparation
D) Action
Question
A common theme originating in Carl Rogers's early writings and continuing to be seen in all of his works is:

A) the need to find meaning in life through love, work, or suffering.
B) the need for a religion to find meaning in life.
C) the importance of expressing feelings that stem from childhood issues.
D) a basic sense of trust in the client's ability to move forward in a constructive manner if the conditions that encourage growth are present.
Question
Accurate empathic understanding helps clients in all the following areas, except:

A) to notice and devalue their experiences.
B) to view prior experiences in new ways.
C) to process their experience both cognitively and bodily.
D) to increase their confidence in making choices and in pursuing a course of action.
Question
Anele, who is uncertain about her career goals and is afraid to commit to any career path, is working with a therapist who specialises in using motivational interviewing strategies. What will her therapist look for in order to assess the success of therapy?

A) An improvement in Anele's ability to block negative thoughts about her career options
B) A reduction in Anele's ambivalence about choosing a career path and an increase in her intrinsic motivation to clarify her direction
C) Progress in working through unconscious conflicts related to commitment
D) A willingness on Anele's part to examine her family constellation in order to deepen her understanding of her reasons for her lack of direction
Question
Carl Rogers drew heavily from existential concepts, especially as they apply to:

A) the transference relationship.
B) countertransference, or unfinished business of the counsellor.
C) the client/therapist relationship.
D) guilt and anxiety.
Question
Methods of expressive arts therapy are based on humanistic principles. Which of the following principles is not one?

A) Releasing creative energy is based on the principle of regression.
B) The creative process is transformative and healing.
C) The expressive arts lead us into the unconscious.
D) Our feelings and emotions are a source of energy.
Question
The concept of unconditional positive regard implies that therapists develop an accepting and approving attitude toward all actions taken by their clients.
Question
Person-centred expressive arts therapy can be used in both group and individual contexts.
Question
Free association and dream analysis are a typical part of the person-centred therapist's procedures.
Question
The person-centred approach evolved from a nondirective therapy to an experiential therapy.
Question
Congruence is a basic characteristic of effective therapists.
Question
The term 'presence' refers to the counsellor's ability to be fully engaged in the therapeutic relationship with the client.
Question
Accurate empathic understanding implies an objective understanding of a client.
Question
The person-centred emphasises the necessary and sufficient conditions for change.
Question
Carl Rogers's approach is based on the assumptions that humans are trustworthy and that clients desire to grow.
Question
If the therapeutic core conditions exist over some period of time, constructive personality change will not occur.
Question
Therapists are encouraged to use positive regard for clients only as a means of shaping their behaviour.
Question
Carl Rogers encouraged counsellors to use a non-confrontational manner with their clients.
Question
The person-centred approach is based on a set of specific therapeutic techniques designed to promote behaviour change.
Question
An assumption of person-centred therapy is that the counsellor's presence is far more powerful than techniques he or she uses to facilitate change.
Question
The person-centred model has become stagnant and shows little sign of evolution.
Question
Carl Rogers is often called the 'father of psychotherapy research.'
Question
Person-centred therapy groups emphasise the unique role of the group counsellor as a leader.
Question
According to Carl Rogers, personality change occurs only when clients develop insight into the origin of their personality problems.
Question
When Rogers challenged the basic assumption that 'the counsellor knows best', he thought that this radical idea would affect the power dynamics and politics of the counselling profession, but to his surprise, it did not.
Question
Therapists who have little respect for their clients can anticipate that their therapeutic work will not be helpful.
Question
Emotion-focused therapy EFT) emerged as a behavioural approach informed by understanding the role of an emotion in human functioning and psychotherapeutic change.
Question
The underlying vision of humanistic philosophy is captured by the metaphor of how an acorn will automatically grow in positive ways, pushed naturally toward its actualisation as an oak.
Question
The person-centred approach is not particularly well-suited to multi-cultural counselling.
Question
Immediacy is highly valued in the person-centred approach
Question
Maslow believed not enough research was being conducted on anxiety, hostility, and neuroses and too much into joy, creativity, and self-fulfillment.
Question
Empathy is a deep and subjective understanding of the client with the client.
Question
Natalie Rogers is no longer an active contributor to the person-centred approach.
Question
Maslow postulated a hierarchy of needs as a source of motivation, with the most basic needs being physiological needs.
Question
The person-centred model has been widely adapted to include such areas as family therapy, crisis
counselling and classroom education.
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Deck 7: Person-Centred Therapy
1
The person-centred therapist generally does not find traditional assessment and diagnosis:

A) as a useful tool for case conceptualisation.
B) as a meaningful way of understanding of a client's psychological state.
C) to be useful because these procedures encourage an external and expert perspective on the client.
D) as a necessary process that does not affect the course of therapy.
C
2
Which of the following is not considered a necessary and sufficient condition for change in the person-centred framework?

A) Unconditional positive regard
B) Creative expression
C) Accurate empathetic understanding
D) Congruence
B
3
Which of the following is not a key concept of the person-centred approach?

A) The focus is on experiencing the immediate moment.
B) In a climate of safety in the therapeutic session, the client comes to realise that there are more authentic ways of being.
C) The client is primarily responsible for the direction of therapy.
D) The focus is on exploration of a client's past.
D
4
The that recently has emerged shares many concepts on the healthy side of human existence with the humanistic approach.

A) positive psychology movement
B) object relations approach
C) dialectical behaviour therapy approach
D) applied behaviour analysis movement
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
A potential limitation of the person-centred approach is:

A) their view of assessment and diagnosis.
B) that some students-in-training and practitioners may have a tendency to be very supportive of clients without being challenging.
C) shortcomings of the studies of the approach.
D) the continual evolution of the approach leads to unclear therapeutic principles.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Which statement is true of the person-centred approach?

A) Therapists should give advice when clients need it.
B) The techniques a therapist uses are less important than his or her attitudes.
C) Therapists should function largely as teachers.
D) Therapy is primarily the therapist's responsibility.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The technique of reflection involves the therapist:

A) restating the client's words verbatim.
B) sharing his or her genuine emotional response with the client.
C) mirroring the client's emotional experience of a particular situation.
D) bringing an actual mirror into the session and having a client look at himself or herself in the mirror.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
In order for a therapist to communicate 'accurate empathic understanding' the counsellor must:

A) have experienced a situation very similar to the client's current predicament.
B) clarify details and facts relevant to the client's experiences.
C) feel a deep sense of warmth toward the client.
D) connect emotionally to the client's subjective world.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Thabo, an eight-year-old boy, was recently removed from his home because he was being physically and sexually abused by his father. In accordance with Maslow's framework, which needs took precedence?

A) Physical and safety needs
B) Belonging and love
C) Esteem from self and others
D) Self-actualisation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Which of the statements below regarding motivational interviewing MI) is not accurate?

A) MI was initially designed as a brief intervention for problem drinking.
B) MI stresses client self-responsibility and promotes an invitational style for working cooperatively with clients to generate alternative solutions to behavioural problems.
C) MI was developed by Maslow in the late 1970s after he created his theory on self-actualisation.
D) MI therapists avoid arguing with clients and reframe resistance as a healthy response.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Which of the following is not a characteristic of the person-centred approach?

A) The focus is on the phenomenological world of the client.
B) It is supported by evidence from ongoing research.
C) The client-centred approach emphasised the role of the therapist as a facilitator of growth and honoured the inherent power of the client.
D) Emphasis is given to developing a contract for therapy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
What is a limitation of person-centred therapy?

A) The approach does not make use of research to study the process or outcomes of therapy.
B) The therapist has more power to manipulate and control the client than is true of most other therapies.
C) The approach does not emphasise the role of techniques in creating change in the client's behaviour.
D) The client is not given enough responsibility to direct the course of his or her own therapy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Characteristics of a self-actualised person include all of the following, except:

A) welcomes uncertainty in his or her life.
B) has a capacity for deep and intense interpersonal relationships.
C) has artificial dualities within himself or herself.
D) is spontaneous and creative.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The person-centred approach's view of human nature:

A) views people as basically competitive.
B) states that humans are driven by irrational forces.
C) emphasises clients' abilities to engage their own resources to act in their world with others.
D) assumes that, while humans have the potential for growth, we tend to remain stagnant.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Person-centred therapy is best described as a:

A) completed 'school' of counselling.
B) fixed set of therapeutic principles.
C) systematic set of behavioural techniques.
D) philosophy of how the therapy process develops.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
One point of disagreement between existential and humanistic thought involves:

A) a respect for the client's subjective experience.
B) a trust in the capacity of the client to make positive choices.
C) an emphasis on freedom.
D) the idea of an innate self-actualising drive.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
What is the most important factor related to progress in person-centred therapy?

A) Defining concrete and measurable goals
B) The therapist's technical skills
C) The relationship between the client and therapist
D) The therapist's ability to think logically and to scientifically solve problems
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The person-centred therapist is best described as a:

A) facilitator.
B) teacher.
C) human engineer.
D) friend.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
In applying the person-centred approach to crisis intervention, therapists should do all of the following, except:

A) communicate a deep sense of understanding.
B) provide genuine support and warmth.
C) use a more structured approach and provide clients with some direction.
D) do not give the individual the opportunity to fully express themselves.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Person-centred therapy is:

A) an action-oriented approach to therapy.
B) a humanistic approach to therapy.
C) an existential approach to therapy.
D) a deterministic approach to therapy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Therapists using motivational interviewing strategies view clients as:

A) opponents to be defeated.
B) allies who play a major role in their present and future success.
C) victims of their own psychopathology who need to be liberated from their pain and dysfunction.
D) people who are lazy and need a powerful incentive to change their ways.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Carl Rogers's original emphasis was on reflection of feelings expressed by the client.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
From Carl Rogers's perspective the client/therapist relationship is characterised by:

A) a sense of equality.
B) the transference relationship.
C) the therapist functioning as the expert.
D) a clearly defined contract that specifies what clients will talk about in the sessions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
In the 1960s and 1970s Rogers did a great deal to encourage the development of:

A) organisational management seminars.
B) private colleges aimed at training person-centred therapists.
C) student-centred teaching and encounter groups.
D) the National Training Laboratories and T-groups.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The is a directional process of striving toward realisation, fulfilment, autonomy, and self-determination.

A) congruence tendency
B) empathic understanding
C) actualising tendency
D) actualising understanding
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
According to Rogerian therapy, an 'internal source of evaluation' is defined as:

A) internalising the validation one receives from others.
B) looking more to oneself for the answers to the problems of existence.
C) going on one's instincts when judging the behaviour of others.
D) a neurotic tendency to be self-critical.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Concerning research on psychotherapy and Carl Rogers, which of the following is not true?

A) Rogers stated his concepts as testable hypotheses and submitted them to research.
B) Rogers opened the field for psychotherapy research.
C) Rogers inspired others to conduct extensive research on counselling process and outcome.
D) Rogers did not conduct the research himself.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which of the following is the correct order in terms of the historical development of Carl Rogers's approach to counselling?

A) Client-centred to person-centred to nondirective
B) Client-centred to nondirective to person-centred
C) Nondirective to client-centred to person-centred
D) Nondirective to person-centred to client-centred
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Which of the following is not true about Carl Rogers?

A) He was raised with strict religious standards in his home.
B) He developed cognitive therapy.
C) At one point in his life, he was preparing to enter the ministry.
D) He made a contribution toward achieving world peace.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Which of the following is not true about the most recent trends in person-centred therapy?

A) It could be referred to as holistic therapy.
B) Acceptance and clarification are the main techniques used.
C) It emphasises an increased involvement of the therapist as a person.
D) It allows the therapist greater freedom to be active in the therapeutic relationship.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
From a person-centred perspective, the best source of knowledge about the client is the:

A) individual client.
B) therapist.
C) client's family.
D) therapeutic relationship.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
A factor that distinguishes the person-centred approach to group counselling from other approaches is the:

A) therapist's role as facilitator.
B) length of treatment.
C) focus on creating a collaborative spirit.
D) focus on building genuine relationships among members.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Carl Rogers's position on confronting the client is that:

A) confrontation is to be avoided at all costs.
B) confrontation causes clients to stop growing.
C) confrontation reflects that the therapist has a need to be in control.
D) confrontation or resistance must be responded to in a non-confrontational manner.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Which of the following personal characteristics of the therapist is most important, according to Carl Rogers?

A) Unconditional positive regard
B) Acceptance
C) Genuineness
D) Accurate empathic understanding
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Philani has been confronted by family members and friends about his excessive gambling. Despite their attempts to help him, he insists that they are overreacting and that he has everything under control. He does not feel the need to alter his behaviours. Philani is at which stage of change?

A) Precontemplation
B) Contemplation
C) Preparation
D) Action
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
A common theme originating in Carl Rogers's early writings and continuing to be seen in all of his works is:

A) the need to find meaning in life through love, work, or suffering.
B) the need for a religion to find meaning in life.
C) the importance of expressing feelings that stem from childhood issues.
D) a basic sense of trust in the client's ability to move forward in a constructive manner if the conditions that encourage growth are present.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Accurate empathic understanding helps clients in all the following areas, except:

A) to notice and devalue their experiences.
B) to view prior experiences in new ways.
C) to process their experience both cognitively and bodily.
D) to increase their confidence in making choices and in pursuing a course of action.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Anele, who is uncertain about her career goals and is afraid to commit to any career path, is working with a therapist who specialises in using motivational interviewing strategies. What will her therapist look for in order to assess the success of therapy?

A) An improvement in Anele's ability to block negative thoughts about her career options
B) A reduction in Anele's ambivalence about choosing a career path and an increase in her intrinsic motivation to clarify her direction
C) Progress in working through unconscious conflicts related to commitment
D) A willingness on Anele's part to examine her family constellation in order to deepen her understanding of her reasons for her lack of direction
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Carl Rogers drew heavily from existential concepts, especially as they apply to:

A) the transference relationship.
B) countertransference, or unfinished business of the counsellor.
C) the client/therapist relationship.
D) guilt and anxiety.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Methods of expressive arts therapy are based on humanistic principles. Which of the following principles is not one?

A) Releasing creative energy is based on the principle of regression.
B) The creative process is transformative and healing.
C) The expressive arts lead us into the unconscious.
D) Our feelings and emotions are a source of energy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 69 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The concept of unconditional positive regard implies that therapists develop an accepting and approving attitude toward all actions taken by their clients.
Unlock Deck
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42
Person-centred expressive arts therapy can be used in both group and individual contexts.
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43
Free association and dream analysis are a typical part of the person-centred therapist's procedures.
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44
The person-centred approach evolved from a nondirective therapy to an experiential therapy.
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45
Congruence is a basic characteristic of effective therapists.
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46
The term 'presence' refers to the counsellor's ability to be fully engaged in the therapeutic relationship with the client.
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47
Accurate empathic understanding implies an objective understanding of a client.
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48
The person-centred emphasises the necessary and sufficient conditions for change.
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49
Carl Rogers's approach is based on the assumptions that humans are trustworthy and that clients desire to grow.
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50
If the therapeutic core conditions exist over some period of time, constructive personality change will not occur.
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51
Therapists are encouraged to use positive regard for clients only as a means of shaping their behaviour.
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52
Carl Rogers encouraged counsellors to use a non-confrontational manner with their clients.
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53
The person-centred approach is based on a set of specific therapeutic techniques designed to promote behaviour change.
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54
An assumption of person-centred therapy is that the counsellor's presence is far more powerful than techniques he or she uses to facilitate change.
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55
The person-centred model has become stagnant and shows little sign of evolution.
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56
Carl Rogers is often called the 'father of psychotherapy research.'
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57
Person-centred therapy groups emphasise the unique role of the group counsellor as a leader.
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58
According to Carl Rogers, personality change occurs only when clients develop insight into the origin of their personality problems.
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59
When Rogers challenged the basic assumption that 'the counsellor knows best', he thought that this radical idea would affect the power dynamics and politics of the counselling profession, but to his surprise, it did not.
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60
Therapists who have little respect for their clients can anticipate that their therapeutic work will not be helpful.
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61
Emotion-focused therapy EFT) emerged as a behavioural approach informed by understanding the role of an emotion in human functioning and psychotherapeutic change.
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62
The underlying vision of humanistic philosophy is captured by the metaphor of how an acorn will automatically grow in positive ways, pushed naturally toward its actualisation as an oak.
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63
The person-centred approach is not particularly well-suited to multi-cultural counselling.
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64
Immediacy is highly valued in the person-centred approach
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65
Maslow believed not enough research was being conducted on anxiety, hostility, and neuroses and too much into joy, creativity, and self-fulfillment.
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66
Empathy is a deep and subjective understanding of the client with the client.
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67
Natalie Rogers is no longer an active contributor to the person-centred approach.
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68
Maslow postulated a hierarchy of needs as a source of motivation, with the most basic needs being physiological needs.
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69
The person-centred model has been widely adapted to include such areas as family therapy, crisis
counselling and classroom education.
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