Theoretical Approaches
Stages of Clinical Practice: Beginning
Stages of Clinical Practice: Middle
Stages of Clinical Practice: Ending Stage
Random
100

Define Psychosocial

Focuses on intrapsychic and interpersonal change. Based on psychoanalytic theory, ego psychology, role, and systems theory.

100

The beginning stage is broken into 3 sections. What are they?

Assessment, establishing a positive therapeutic relationship, and contracting or goal setting.

100

Give at least 4 interventions a worker could utilize during the middle stage.

Supporting or sustaining, direct influence, exploration, reflection & respond, confrontation, clarification, interpretation, partialization, univeralization, ventilation, and catharsis. 

100

A client comes to you with issues, during your sessions you are able to work through these issues. As a result, you begin the termination process. But the client begins to show the initial issues again. What should you do?

Continue the termination process. The initial symptoms of presenting problem reemerge at time of termination. This is not a reason to continue treatment, but should be worked on within the termination period to consolidate earlier gains made.

100

The most important consideration in choosing a goal with a client is 

The client. The NASW Code of Ethics and the professional mandate for social workers holds the professional mandate for social worker holds the client's right to self-determination, the social worker's obligation to support that right, as a primary practice obligation.

200

Define Problem-Solving

To solve discrete problems, based on psychosocial and functional approaches

200

What characteristics should the work have when establishing a positive therapeutic relationship?

non possessive warmth and concern, genuineness, appropriate empathy, nonjudgmental acceptance, optimism about possibilities of change, objectivity regarding the situation, professional knowledge

200

Catharsis is an intervention that can be used by the worker in the Middle Stage. Define catharsis.

reliving and consciously examining repressed, early life, or traumatic experiences in treatment to achieve abreaction, the release of tension or anxiety that was caused by the conflict and its repression.

200

Describe Defensive Reactions

Client may deny or devalue the work and the worker to deny feelings about losing something of value. The client may act out feelings of tension, anxiety, depression through self-defeating behavior (e.g., lateness, explosiveness, premature ending).

200

A client's capacity to enter a social work relationship cannot usually be determined by which of the following: 

1. emotional and personality make up

2. age

3. judgment

4.intelligence

Age. Age will more accurately reveal how the person may enter into a relationship, based on developmental expectations, rather than whether they are capable of a relationship.

300

Describe the difference between behavior modification and cognitive therapy.

Behavior Modification: for symptom reduction of problem behaviors and learning alternative positive behaviors.

Cognitive therapy: for symptom reduction of negative thoughts, distorted thinking, and dysfunctional beliefs.

300

Define Goal Setting

An explicit agreement between the worker and client regarding target problems, goals, and strategies of social work intervention, and differentiating the roles and tasks of the client and the worker.

300

What are the three special considerations in treatment?

Resistance, transference, and countertransference

300

You should plan adequate time for termination. When terminating long-term treatment how many sessions would you have? 

4-8 sessions

300

A criterion that is not a measure of a client's motivation is

1. the level of discomfort

2. the level of hope

3. ego strength

4. the ability to see himself or herself as able to change

Ego Strength will influence motivation

400

Define ecological or life model

focuses on life transitions, environmental pressures, and the maladaptive fit between individual and family or the larger environment. Focuses on the interaction and interdependence of people and environments. 

400

Goal Setting includes 6 areas. These areas are...

Mutual Agreement, differentiated participation, reciprocal accountability, explicitness, realistic agreement, and flexibility.

400

Describe the difference between transference and countertransference. 

Transference: Client's unconscious attempts to recapitulate with the worker the conflicts attached to a relationship experienced with significant persons in the past. Help the client to understand the dynamics of the transference and how it relates to past relationships and present difficulties. 


Countertransference: The therapist's unconscious distorted perceptions and responses to the client based on emotional conflicts regarding a significant person from the worker's past. Use supervisory help or therapy to understand and not impose on the client. 

400

When evaluation treatment and treatment relationships. What questions would you consider? 

What treatment goals were met? Not met? What was effective within the treatment that facilitated growth? What did not work effectively? What facilitated meeting treatment goals from the client's resources outside treatment and which may continue as resources beyond termination.

400

The most appropriate technique to use with a new client who is decompensating is

1. confrontation

2. ego support

3. ventilation

4. operant conditioning

Ego Support. There is a minimal relationship with a new client. The social worker may not have a complete psychosocial assessment. They should appeal to the client's strengths in order to provide safety for the decompensating client and to support his highest level of functioning. 

500

Explain the difference between group and narrative therapy.

Group Therapy: A practice model in which group members can help and be helped by others with similar problems, get validation for their own experiences, and test new social identities and roles. 

Narrative Therapy: USes the stories that people tell about their lives to reveal how they structure perceptions of their experiences. Therapists co-constructs alternative, more affirming stories with the client.

500

How should a social work create a goal with a resistant client?

The worker should recognize, accept, and address their own and client's resistance. The worker should clarify their role and purpose. Worker explores reactions and strategizes how to work with them. 
500

Interpretation is used with clients who are not emotionally fragile. The worker suggests the psychodynamic meaning of the client's thoughts, feelings and fantasies, especially about the origins of problem behaviors. Aims at enhancing the client's insight and working through conflictual material by deepening and extending the client's conscious understanding Interpretation may involve 3 areas. What are those 3 areas?

1. Uncovering repressed/suppressed material

2. Connecting the present to the past so the client can see present disotrations more clearly. 

3. Integrating material from various sources so the client gains a more realistic perspective on his/her situation.

500

There are 7 factors to  that affect the client's treatment ending. List at least 4 factors.

1. Degree of client's involvement in treatment. 

2. Degree of success and satisfaction. 

3. The client's earlier losses. 

4. Mastery of early life separation-individuation stage of development.

5. Reason for ending: May be more intense if worker leaves and ending is perceived as against the client's wishes or as a rejection or narcissistic injury to self-esteem. 

6. Timing: Is ending occuring a a difficult or a propitious moment in the client's life? 

7. Is termination with one worker part of a transfer plan to begin with a new worker? In this case, the evaluation phase of work should be used to formulate ideas about the focus and goals for the next treatment relationship.

500

In the social worker relationship, the social worker should be careful not to act on

1. A transference reaction

2. a worker-client relationship

3. a countertransference reaction

4.the client's desire to change the contract and add new goals. 

A countertransference reaction

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