A therapist asks, “When did you first notice that Self-Doubt started interfering with your dreams?” This type of question serves which primary narrative function?
B. Exploring the problem’s influence over the client’s life
Narrative therapists explore how the problem influences the person’s life story.
Which of the following questions would best reflect a Reality Therapy technique?
C. “What are you doing now, and is it helping you get what you want?”
This reflects the WDEP model: Wants, Doing, Evaluation, Planning.
Which of the following would NOT be considered an existential approach to a life transition?
C. Avoiding discussion of the change to reduce discomfort
Avoidance undermines meaning exploration.
A CBT therapist uses behavioral experiments to test a client’s fear of public speaking. This strategy is best described as:
C. Empirical hypothesis testing
CBT often uses experiments to empirically test the accuracy of beliefs.
Which of the following group leader responses is NOT aligned with existential philosophy?
A. “Here’s exactly what you must do to fix your situation.”
Existential leaders prompt reflection, not dictate prescriptive solutions.
A counselor assigns a couple the paradoxical task of scheduling time to argue at 6 PM daily. This aligns with which family therapy technique?
C. Prescribing the symptom
Strategic therapists use paradox to disrupt dysfunctional patterns; by instructing clients to continue a symptom, clients gain awareness of control and autonomy.
Which of the following best distinguishes first-order from second-order change?
B. First-order changes increase behavioral intensity; second-order changes modify underlying rules
First-order is more of the same (e.g., yelling louder), while second-order shifts the rules or system logic itself.
Which of the following is NOT a way in which Solution-Focused theory views human nature?
C. Humans are motivated by innate drives.
In feminist therapy, a counselor notices a client frequently apologizing for expressing anger. Which intervention aligns best with feminist principles?
A. Reframe the anger as a healthy response to systemic oppression.
Feminist therapy validates anger as a legitimate emotional response to social injustices and power imbalances.
A therapist observes that a family repeatedly redirects focus to a child diagnosed with ADHD whenever tension arises between the parents. Which theoretical model would interpret this as a triangle used to manage unresolved dyadic conflict?
C. Bowenian
Bowen identified triangulation as a coping mechanism in fused relationships, wherein tension between two individuals is displaced onto a third party, often a child.
Which of the following is NOT a task in the final phase of existential group work?
B. Revisiting childhood experiences to uncover historical causes
Final phase focuses on application, not returning to historical exploration.
During therapy, a client says, “Depression runs my life.” Which narrative technique is most appropriate to begin challenging this dominant story?
C. Assist the client in separating “Depression” from their identity.
Narrative therapy externalizes the problem, separating it from the person to allow space for re-authoring.
A group member expresses anger about a recent layoff, saying, “They took away my purpose in life.” An existential group leader would MOST likely:
A. Challenge the member to explore other possible sources of meaning
Existentialists see purpose and meaning as self-created rather than externally granted. The leader would guide the member toward reclaiming responsibility for meaning-making.
Which of the following most aligns with the WDEP model in Reality Therapy?
B. “What do you want, and what are you doing to get it?”
A therapist notes that under stress, one family member becomes domineering, another avoids conflict entirely, while a third intellectualizes. What lens is being applied here?
B. Humanistic – communication stances
Satir identified five roles under stress: placater, blamer, super-reasonable, irrelevant, and congruent communicator.
A client reports that they feel anxious and assume this means something bad will happen. This best reflects which distortion?
B. Emotional reasoning
Emotional reasoning occurs when individuals interpret emotions as evidence for the truth of their thoughts or events.
A therapist notices that a child only completes chores when the parent yells. They develop a reinforcement chart that rewards task completion instead. This is an example of:
C. Functional behavior analysis and positive reinforcement
Behavioral family therapy focuses on modifying contingencies and reinforcers within the family system.
A family describes themselves as “damaged” after years of intergenerational substance use. A narrative therapist invites them to name a time they resisted this label. This supports:
C. Re-authoring of preferred identity stories
Narrative therapy promotes storytelling that reflects the family’s strengths and resistance to dominant, negative narratives.
A therapist working with a family impacted by schizophrenia delivers information about medication adherence and relapse prevention. The therapist’s role is best described as:
B. Informational and collaborative
Psychoeducational therapy focuses on teaching families about the illness while fostering problem-solving and support.
In SFBT, which technique encourages clients to notice times when the problem was absent or less severe?
C. Exception finding
Exception questions help clients identify successful coping moments and build on them.
A therapist helps a client recognize the link between their thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. This conceptual framework is known as the:
B. ABC model
The ABC model (Activating event, Belief, Consequence) outlines how beliefs influence emotional and behavioral outcomes.
In Narrative Therapy, why might a clinician encourage a client to write a letter to “Mr. Trouble,” a name the client gave their anxiety?
A. To help the client externalize the problem and assert agency over it.
Naming the problem and writing to it promotes externalization and personal agency, both key concepts in narrative work.
In behaviorist models of treatment, which is the most appropriate way to monitor client progress?
B. By tracking measurable behavior frequencies over time
Behavioral models emphasize observable, measurable outcomes—progress is tracked by how frequently target behaviors occur or decrease.
A student says, “I always mess up when I speak in front of a group.” Identify the cognitive distortion.
B. Overgeneralization
The use of the word “always” signals a sweeping conclusion based on limited experiences.