25
Group Therapy PSY633 Chapter 14, The Therapist: Specialized Formats and Procedural Aids. Chapter 15, Specialized Therapy Groups

Group Therapy PSY633

  • Upload
    burton

  • View
    92

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

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

Citation preview

Page 1: Group Therapy  PSY633

Group Therapy PSY633 Chapter 14, The Therapist: Specialized

Formats and Procedural Aids. Chapter 15, Specialized Therapy Groups

Page 2: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

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

Page 3: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

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

Page 4: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 5: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 6: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 7: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 8: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 9: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 10: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 11: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 12: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 13: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 14: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

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

Page 15: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 16: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

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

Page 17: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

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

Page 18: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 19: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 20: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 21: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 22: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 23: Group Therapy  PSY633

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

Page 24: Group Therapy  PSY633

The End

Page 25: Group Therapy  PSY633

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