Definitions
Frameworks
Social Justice Counseling
Cross-cultural counseling
Misc.
100

Refers to unearned access to resources and social power that are only available to some as a result of their advantaged social group membership

What is privilege

100

a framework that involves the individual, group, and universal levels of developing personal identity

What is the Tripartite Model

100

A technique that acknowledges cultural similarities and differences with clients 

broaching

100

An approach used to point out similarities and differences when engaging in cross-cultural counseling

broaching

100

Therapeutic alliance and managing countertransference are two examples

What are empirically supported relationship variables

200

ability to maintain an interpersonal stance that is other-oriented (or open to the other) in relation to aspects of cultural identity that are most important to the [person].

What is cultural humility

200

a framework to implement multicultural and social justice competencies into counseling theories, practices, and research

Multicultural & Social Justice Competencies

200

level of intervention that addresses monocultural policies, programs, practices, and structures

organizational/institutional

200

The task in the identity tolerance stage of the Cass Model

What is decrease social isolation?

200

An approach that involves the client jointly defining the presenting problem to enhance the accuracy of assessment and treatment planning

Collaborative conceptualization

300

a culture-specific viewpoint 

What is emic?

300

Self-awareness, which involves examining one's attitudes and beliefs, knowledge, skills, and actions relative to their worldview is a developmental domain of which framework

Multicultural & Social Justice Competencies

300

“We have been talking about your sense that your coworkers are prejudiced. What has this conversation with me been like for you? What has it been like to share this with a White therapist who hasn’t had that experience?” is an example of what type of broaching

intra-counseling broaching

300

Assessing levels of acculturation is particularly important when counseling what racial/ethnic group

What is Latinx

300

Expressiveness, self-disclosure, insight are examples of

What are culture bound values?

400

a culture-universal perspective

etic

400

The level in the tripartite framework that represents "all individuals are, in some respects, like some other individuals"

Group level

400

Where is a counselor on the broaching continuum when they are fearful of doing it wrong and broach reluctantly

Isolating

400

Type of communication that relies heavily on nonverbals rather than the verbal content of the message

What is high context communication

400
"God helps those who help themselves" indicates what worldview quadrant

internal locus of control, internal locus of responsiblity

500

brief and commonplace daily verbal or behavioral indignities, whether intentional or unintentional that communicate negative racial slights and insults

What are microaggressions
500

Framework developed by Hays that helps us examine dominant and non-dominant aspects that contribute to cultural identity

ADDRESSING

500

Reaching out to collaborate with family, friends, and peers who will be a source of support for privileged and marginalized clients is at what level of intervention

Interpersonal
500

The two elements associated with counselor credibility

What is expertness and trustworthiness

500

Some of the ways this cultural aspect is relevant to counseling include sense of purpose, provides meaning, and associated with identity

Religion and spirituality

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