group therapy psy633

Post on 24-Feb-2016

92 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Group Therapy PSY633 . Chapter 14, The Therapist: Specialized Formats and Procedural Aids. Chapter 15, Specialized Therapy Groups. 1. According to Yalom , nothing will ensure failure as well as: (477 ). a. difficult patients b . a nervous therapist c. severe pathology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Group Therapy PSY633 Chapter 14, The Therapist: Specialized

Formats and Procedural Aids. Chapter 15, Specialized Therapy Groups

1. According to Yalom, nothing will ensure failure as well as: (477)

a. difficult patientsb. a nervous therapistc. severe pathologyd. inappropriate goalse. anxious clients

1. According to Yalom, nothing will ensure failure as well as: (477)

a. difficult patientsb. a nervous therapistc. severe pathologyd. inappropriate goalse. anxious clients

2. Joseph Hersey Pratt, a Boston internist, is generally acknowledged to be: (539)

a. the father of contemporary group therapyb. the founder of estc. the leader in bereavement group therapyd. guru of internet support groupse. inventor of the here and now focus

2. Joseph Hersey Pratt, a Boston internist, is generally acknowledged to be: (539)

a. the father of contemporary group therapyb. the founder of estc. the leader in bereavement group therapyd. guru of internet support groupse. inventor of the here and now focus

3. Yalom and others did a major study of encounter groups using college students. They concluded that ____. (536)

a. the ideological school to which the therapist belonged outcome

b. gestalt was more effective than synanon or traditional T-groups

c. leaders’ orientation predicts their behavior in group

d. leaders’ behavior largely determines group effectiveness

e. Gestalt therapists lead a group in a way different from TA therapists

3. Yalom and others did a major study of encounter groups using college students. They concluded that ____. (536)

a. the ideological school to which the therapist belonged outcome

b. gestalt was more effective than synanon or traditional T-groups

c. leaders’ orientation predicts their behavior in group

d. leaders’ behavior largely determines group effectiveness

e. Gestalt therapists lead a group in a way different from TA therapists

4. In analyzing the study from question 3, the researchers determined that _____ involves challenging, confronting, modeling and high self-disclosure.

a. meaning attributionb. executive functionc. emotional activationd. caringe. b & d

4. In analyzing the study from question 3, the researchers determined that _____ involves challenging, confronting, modeling and high self-disclosure.

a. meaning attributionb. executive functionc. emotional activationd. caringe. b & d

5. The purpose of the Johari Window is to _____(529)

a. make the familiar strangeb. clarify the function of feedback and self-disclosurec. keep participants in the here and nowd. provide for meta-analysise. clarify the role of the leader

5. The purpose of the Johari Window is to _____(529)

a. make the familiar strangeb. clarify the function of feedback and self-disclosurec. keep participants in the here and nowd. provide for meta-analysise. clarify the role of the leader

6. Therapists recognize that psychotherapy is often cyclotherapy because : (488)

a. patients cycle in and outb. life becomes therapy, paperwork, therapy, paperworkc. managed care drives therapyd. they return again and again to the same issuese. all of the above

6. Therapists recognize that psychotherapy is often cyclotherapy because : (488)

a. patients cycle in and outb. life becomes therapy, paperwork, therapy, paperworkc. managed care drives therapyd. they return again and again to the same issuese. all of the above

7. The single-session time frame for group demands: (488)

a. patience & a sense of humorb. persistence & cohesivenessc. commitment & caringd. relaxation & calmnesse. efficiency & activity

7. The single-session time frame for group demands: (488) a. patience & a sense of humorb. persistence & cohesivenessc. commitment & caringd. relaxation & calmnesse. efficiency & activity

8. The acute inpatient setting is _____ group therapy. (481)

a. inviting to b. easy forc. uncommon tod. inhospitable toe. ideal for

8. The acute inpatient setting is _____ group therapy. (481)

a. inviting to b. easy forc. uncommon tod. inhospitable toe. ideal for

9. One problem with inpatient groups is: (482)

a. slow turnover of membersb. homogeneity of pathologyc. excessive time to filld. clear and rigid boundariese. limited therapist control

9. One problem with inpatient groups is: (482)

a. slow turnover of membersb. homogeneity of pathologyc. excessive time to filld. clear and rigid boundariese. limited therapist control

10. Which of the following is a reasonable goal for an acute inpatient group? (485)

a. to diminish hallucinationsb. resolve a psychotic depressionc. decrease isolationd. slow down a patient with maniae. decrease psychotic panic

10. Which of the following is a reasonable goal for an acute inpatient group? (485)

a. to diminish hallucinationsb. resolve a psychotic depressionc. decrease isolationd. slow down a patient with maniae. decrease psychotic panic

Bonus: Group CBT arose from the search for greater: (513)

a. Meaning b. Psychodynamic relevancyc. Clinical efficiencyd. Understanding of existential issues in therapye. Understanding of the effect of the past on current

functioning

Bonus: Group CBT arose from the search for greater: (513) a. Meaning b. Psychodynamic relevancyc. Clinical efficiencyd. Understanding of existential issues in therapye. Understanding of the effect of the past on current

functioning

The End

.1-d, 2-a, 3-d, 4-c, 5-b, 6-d, 7-e, 8-d, 9-e, 10-c

top related