Download NCE and CPCE Study Guide Exam Questions and Answers. and more Exams Nursing in PDF only on Docsity! NCE and CPCE Study Guide Exam Questions and Answers. What does CACREP stand for? - Correct Answer the Council for the Accreditation and Counseling Related Educational Programs What does CCE stand for? - Correct Answer Center for Credentialing and Education, inc What does REBT stand for and who is the main theorist associated with it? - Correct Answer Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy; Ellis. Name Freud's Psychosexual stages of development. - Correct Answer Oral, Anal, Phallic, Latent, and Genital. (Mnemonic device: Oh, Anthony, Please Let's Go!) Describe Erik Erikson's stages. - Correct Answer Erik Erikson is an Ego psychologist and a disciple of Freud. His 8 stages focus on social relationships, therefore they are called psychosocial. Each stage has a crisis that must be overcome in order to move on to the next stage. His stages are Trust v. Mistrust; Autonomy v. Shame/doubt; Industry v. Inferiority; Initiative vs. Guilt; Identity v. Role confusion; Intimacy v. Isolation; Generativity vs. Stagnation; Integrity vs. Despair. (Mnemonic device: The Air In Iceland Is Icy, Greenland Isn't.) define psychometric. - Correct Answer pertaining to mental testing and measurement define psychodiagnostic - Correct Answer the study of personality through interpretation of behavior and non-verbal cues; or labeling a client in a diagnostic category. define psychopharmacology - Correct Answer the study of the effects drugs have on psychological functions. What is the id? - Correct Answer the basic instinct principle in Freudian theory. It is the seat of aggression and sexual impulse. It is devoid of logic and time orientation. It is chaotic and bodily focused. What is the ego? - Correct Answer this is the reality principle in Freudian theory. It indicates power of reasoning and control over behavior. It helps keep the impulses of the id in check. What is the superego? - Correct Answer the superego is the moralistic and idealistic principle in the Freudian theory. Which group of theorists believe "if you can't measure it, it doesn't exist"? - Correct Answer Behaviorists. They focus on O.O.B. The observable, objective behaviors. (My AP psych teacher in HS called it the O.O.B. tampon. gross, but it helped me remember it!) Who is the only psychoanalyst with a developmental theory that covered the entire lifespan? - Correct Answer Erik Erikson's Psychosocial stages covered the entire lifespan. Each stage has a crisis or turning point. What theory is A. A. Brill associated with? - Correct Answer Career theory Milton H. Erickson is associated with... - Correct Answer Brief psychotherapy and hypnosis. What field is Jean Piaget associated with? - Correct Answer Cognitive Child Development Who is Jay Haley and what is the nature of his contribution to counseling? - Correct Answer Haley is most famous for his work on strategic and problem-solving therapy, more specifically with his use of the paradox technique. He also studied with Milton Erickson. Arnold Lazarus - Correct Answer He is a known behavioral therapist who worked specifically with methods of desensitization and phobias. He is most associated with Multimodal Therapy. William Perry - Correct Answer He is known for his work in adult cognitive development, specifically with college students. He worked a lot with the concept of "dualistic thinking" among college students, where everything is either black or white. (Memory technique: think of Katy Perry's song Hot and Cold to associate Perry with dualism.) Ed Neukrug - Correct Answer Also a cognitive developmentalist. His work is similar to Perry's. He noted that college students initially think that their professor has all the answers (dualistic), but gradually get to a more relativistic way of thinking and realize that answers exist that are relative to a given situation. (Memory technique: "What do you THINK about Ed nuking the rug??" Think= cognitive dev, Ed Neukrug.) What is biofeedback? - Correct Answer Biofeedback is a technique utilized to help individuals learn to control bodily processes more effectively. The most ground-breaking work in this area occurred at the Menninger Clinic in Kansas, even though it is a traditional psychoanalytic foothold. From who's work do we get the term "identity crisis"? - Correct Answer Erik Erikson, because his psychosocial stages involve a crisis in order to proceed to the next stage. RS factors - Correct Answer RS stands for Religious and Spiritual. RS factors are often examined by counselors who are attempting to integrate the practice of "positive psychology" into their work. What is Positive Psychology? - Correct Answer a term coined by Abraham Maslow (humanistic perspective) and popularized by Martin Segliman, refers to the study of human strengths such as joy, wisdom, altruism, ability to love, and happiness. What concept is Martin Segliman known for? - Correct Answer The concept of Learned Helplessness- in the cases of abuse or maltreatment, humans and animals can be trained to think "there is no way out" even if one is clearly present. What branch of psychology is Alfred Adler known for? - Correct Answer he is the founder of Individual Psychology, and stresses the inferiority complex. What are the charateristics of Kohlberg's Preconventional stage of moral development? - Correct Answer child responds to consequences. Reward and punishment influence behavior. What are the charateristics of Kohlberg's Conventional stage? - Correct Answer individual wants to meet the standards of family, society, and the nation. What are the characteristics of Kohlberg's Postconventional stage? - Correct Answer (also known as self-accepted stage) individual is concerned with universal, ethical principles of justice, dignity, and equality of human rights, where the common good is a key issue. (He did not believe that most people reached this level) Approximately how many middle class urban males did Kohlberg think would reach the Postconventional level? - Correct Answer under 40%. What are some examples of people believed to have reached the Postconventional stage of moral development? - Correct Answer Ghandi, Socrates, Martin Luther King, Jr. What is the first stage of Erikson's Psychosocial stages? - Correct Answer Trust vs. Mistrust (birth to 1 year) Harry Stack Sullivan - Correct Answer postulated the stages of infancy, childhood, juvenile, preadolescence, early adolescence, and late adolescence. what is Psychiatry of Interpersonal Relations? - Correct Answer similar to Erikson, biological determination is seen as less important than interpersonal issues and the soci- cultural demands of society A person who has mastered Erikson's first 7 stages would then enter into which stage? - Correct Answer Integrity vs. Despair (60-death) Integrity implies the individual is mostly satisfied with life and feels it has been worthwhile. What is a Periodic Fugue State? - Correct Answer an individual experiencing amnesia leaves home, often with the intention of changing jobs and identities. (I have no idea why we would ever need to know this, unless we decided to quit counseling, move to Hollywood, and become screen writers...) Counter-Conditioning - Correct Answer A behavioristic technique in which the goal is to weaken or eliinate a learned response by pairing it with a stronger or desirable response. (systematic desensitization by Arnold Lazarus is a good example) Good boy/good girl orientation - Correct Answer is a sublevel of the conventional stage of moral development in which a person is concerned with approbation and the ability to please others in order to achieve recognition. Hedonism - Correct Answer a concept that arises in the preconventional stage of moral development. the child thinks, "if I am nice to others, others will be nice and give me what I want". What is the Zone of Proximal Development - Correct Answer pioneered by Lev Vygotsky; describes the difference between a child's performance on a task without the aid of a teacher, and his performance with the aid of a teacher. (natural capacity vs. capacity through learning) what theory is organ inferiority associated with? - Correct Answer Alfred Adler's individual psychology. Maturationist Theory - Correct Answer behavior is guided exclusively by hereditary factors, but certain behaviors will not manifest themselves until the necessary stimuli are present in the environment. ALso suggests that neural development must reach a certain level of maturity for the behavior to unfold. What would be the primary goal of a maturationist counselor? - Correct Answer to unleash the inborn abilities, instincts, and drives of the client. The client's childhood and past are seen as important therapeutic topics. John Bowlby - Correct Answer he is most associated with attachment and bonding theory. HE though that attachment had a survival value, called adaptive significance. He suggested that a child must bond with an adult before the age of 3 in order to live a healthy social life. object loss - Correct Answer Bowlby- if a child does not make an attachment to an adult before the age of 3, he will suffer object loss, which is said to be the breeding ground for abnormal behaviors. symbiosis - Correct Answer Mahler's term for a child's absolute dependence on a female caregiver. Difficulties in symbiotic relationship can result in adult psychosis. In what stage and age does the "midlife crisis" occur? - Correct Answer Erikson's Generativity vs. Stagnation (or Self-Absorption) stage. Occurs between the ages of 35-45 for men and 5 years earlier for women. It begins when they realize their lives are half way over and seek to change the goals and aspirations they have not yet realized. Generativity= productive, happy, looks out for others. Daniel Levinson - Correct Answer wrote Seasons of a Man's Life and Seasons of a Woman's Life. He viewed midlife crises as positive things, stating that those who do not face a midlife crisis could become stagnant later in life- avoiding the crises could lead to a lack of vitality later. Harry Harlow - Correct Answer the researcher known for his work with maternal deprivation and rhesus monkeys. He believed that attachment is an innate tendancy. Define the concept of reversibility and when does it occur according to Piaget? - Correct Answer Occurs in the 3rd Stage, Concrete Operations. Says one can undo an action, hence an object can return to it's initial shape. How are kids generally in Piaget's Preoperational Thought Stage? - Correct Answer Egocentric (the rain is following me). The child can not view the world from the vantage point of someone else. How many levels of moral development does Kohlberg's Theory have and name them? - Correct Answer Three Levels. Preconventional, Convential, and Postconventional. (Each level is then broken down into two stages). What does the Heinz Story do for Kohlberg? - Correct Answer It is a way to assess the level and stage of moral development one is at. Where does the term "Identity Crisis" come from? - Correct Answer Erik Erikcon What is Alfred Adler the founder of? - Correct Answer Individual Psychology, which stresses the inferiority complex. Describe each of Kohlberg's Level of Morality. - Correct Answer Preconvential- child responds to consequences, reward and punishment play a big role here. Conventional- individual wants to meet the standards of the family, society, and even the nation. Postconvential- hard to reach. Individual is concerned with universal, ethical principles of justice, dignity, and equality of human rights. A key issue is the common good of society. What is Harry Stack Sullivan's Theory? - Correct Answer Psychiatry of Interpersonal Relations. Biological determination is seen as less important then interpersonal issues and the sociocultural demands of society. (similar to Erik Erikson's) In Kohlberg's first or preconvential level what is the individual's moral behavior guided by? - Correct Answer Consequences What did Lev Vygotsky pioneer? - Correct Answer The Zone of Proximal Development (it describes the difference between a child's performance without a teacher vs. that which he or she is capable of with an instructor). What can Frued and Erikson be classified as? - Correct Answer Maturationists. The client's childhood and past are seen as important therapeutic topics. John Bowlby's name is most closely associated with what? - Correct Answer Bonding and attachment. He believes a child must have a bond with an adult by age 3 and if this bond is lost at an early age it is called "object loss." In which Erikson stage does the midlife crisis occur? - Correct Answer Generativity vs. Stagnation What is Harry Harlow known for? - Correct Answer His work with maternal deprivation and isolation in rhesus monkeys. He believed that attachment was an innate tendency and not one which is learned. What was Freud's structural Theory of the mind? - Correct Answer Id, Ego, and Superego What does Manifest mean? - Correct Answer Describes the dream material as it is presented to the dreamer. What does Latent content mean? - Correct Answer Refers to the hidden meaning of the dream (which is seen as far more important by the Freudians). When is the fear of death greatest? - Correct Answer Middle Age In Freudian Theory when does attachment being a major factor evolve? - Correct Answer During the Oral Stage, the first psychosexual stage. What did Stanley Coopersmith find? - Correct Answer That child-rearing methods seem to have tremendous impact on self-esteem. Define Cephalocaudal. - Correct Answer Head to foot. What is the Oedipus Complex and when does it occur in Freud's Stages of Development? - Correct Answer The boy's wish to marry his mother and rage toward his father. It occurs during the phallic stage (ages 3-5 years old). Define Electra Complex. - Correct Answer When the female child fantasizes about sexual relations with the parent of the opposite sex. Who is the Father of Psychoanalysis? - Correct Answer Freud What do Empiricists believe? - Correct Answer That development merely consists of quantitative changes. Scientists can only learn from objective facts. Experience is the source of acquiring knowledge. The forerunner of behaviorism. Who thought up Empiricism? - Correct Answer John Locke A theorist who believes developmental strides are qualitative is? - Correct Answer A Organicism. (Gestalt psychologists) According to Piaget, what stage do reflexes play the greatest role in? - Correct Answer The first one, the Sensorimotor Stage. This is also where "object permanence" is emphasized. What does Ethology refer to and whose work is it associated with? - Correct Answer It means the study of animals behavior in their natural environment. It's associated with Konrad Lorenz. Define centration and what stage of Piaget's does it occur in? - Correct Answer Occurs in the preoperational stage. Characterized by focusing on a key feature of a given object without noticing the rest of it. Who is the Father of Reality Theory? - Correct Answer William Glasser During what Piaget Stage do children acquire a symbolic schema? - Correct Answer Preoperational Stage (2-7 years old). Define Negative Reinforcement. - Correct Answer When the removal of a stimulus increases the probability that an antecedent behavior will occur. Define Positive Reinforcement. - Correct Answer The addition of a stimulus strengthens or increases a behavior. the group (robbing a bank). If you break a Folkway generally it results only in embarrassment (drinking soup out of a communal bowl). Define Folkways. - Correct Answer Correct, normal, or habitual behavior. Who is considered the first social reformer (along with their associates) concerned with guidance in the United States? - Correct Answer Frank Parsons (wrote Choosing a Vocation) What does Emory Bogardus' social distance scale evaluate? - Correct Answer How an individual feels about other ethnic groups. Name the two steps of the foot-in-the-door technique. - Correct Answer Step 1: Get the person to first agree to a less repugnant request Step 2: He or she will be more likely to comply with a request which is even more distasteful. How is a culture defined? - Correct Answer Primarily via norms and values. How does a society differ from a culture? - Correct Answer A society is a self-perpetuating independent group which occupies a definitive territory. Define Ethnocentrism. - Correct Answer when one uses their own culture as a yardstick to measure all others. Conveys the notion that one's own group is superior. Define Modal Personality. - Correct Answer the personality which is characteristic or typical of the group in question. What does the Cognitive Dissonance Theory predict? - Correct Answer The person will look for things which are consistent with his or her behavior. What type of model works best with persons who respond well to an authority figure? - Correct Answer An Active-Directive Model. What does Cognitive Dissonance Research deal mainly with? - Correct Answer Cognition and Attitude formation. What type of counseling has been used more then other models to help promote understanding between cultures and races? - Correct Answer Rogerian Person-Centered counseling. What are three major barriers to intercultural counseling? - Correct Answer 1.- Culture- Bond Values 2.- Class-Bound Values 3.- Language Differences Define Emic (multicultural counseling). - Correct Answer This viewpoint emphasizes that each client is an individual with individual differences. Very culture-specific on how you work with each client. Define Etic (multicultural counseling). - Correct Answer This viewpoint adheres to the theory that humans are humans, regardless of background and culture-thus the same theories and techniques can be applied to any client the counselor helps. Talk about the difference of autoplastic/alloplastic viewpoints when it pertains to intercultural helping. - Correct Answer Autoplastic- asserts that change comes from within. Alloplastic- the client can cope best by changing or altering external factors in the environment. What did R.H. Allport create? - Correct Answer The concept of social facilitation. What is the concept of social facilitation? - Correct Answer Proves that a person will perform better at a task when he or she is part of a group. Even when no verbal interaction. (number example in book) In social psychology what does the sleeper effect assert? - Correct Answer That after a period of time, one forgets the communicator but remembers the message. The communication may have more impact after some times has passed. What two authors helped to introduce social psychology in America? - Correct Answer McDougall and Ross. Who coined the term Group Therapy? - Correct Answer Jacob Moreno. What noted psychologist is associated with obedience and authority? - Correct Answer Stanley Milgram (disturbing shock therapy example in book). Define Dysthymia as in the DSM. - Correct Answer A longstanding depressed mood (1 year for children/adolescents and 2 years for adults). AKA neurotic depression or depressive neurosis. Name the three basic categories of conflict. - Correct Answer 1.- Approach-Approach Conflict (easiest to help client work through and least anxiety involved) 2.- Approach-Avoidance Conflict (presents a positive factor with a negative factor) 3.- Avoidance-Avoidance Conflict (two negative alternatives) What did the "Robbers' Cave Experiment" conclude? - Correct Answer That the most effective way to reduce hostility between groups is to give them an alternative goal that requires a joint effort by both groups together. Define acculturation. - Correct Answer Integrating one's own cultural beliefs and behaviors with the dominant culture. What is converion/reparative therapy intended to do? - Correct Answer Convert homosexuals to heterosexuals. What did Alfred Adler create? Father of what? - Correct Answer Individual Psychology. What did Carl Jung create? Father of what? - Correct Answer Analytic Psychology. Name Eric Berne's (Father of Transactional Analysis) 3 Ego States of Transactional Analysis (TA). - Correct Answer The Child, the Adult, the Parent. In TA what is the conscience, or ego, state concerned with moral behavior? What is it in Freudian Theory? - Correct Answer Parent in TA Superego in Freudian Theory Define Transference. - Correct Answer When the client displaces emotion felt toward a significant other onto the analyst, counselor, or therapist. Define Archetypes. - Correct Answer The material that makes up the collective unconscious, which is passed from generation to generation. Jung spoke of this. What is an Eclectic Counselor? - Correct Answer One who attempts to choose the best theoretical approach based on the client's attributes, resources, and situation. Define Associationism and who are the pioneers? - Correct Answer This asserts that ideas are held together by associations. John Locke, David Hume, James Mill, David Hartley. B.F. Skinner's Reinforcement Theory elaborated on what other theory? - Correct Answer Edward Thorndike's Law of Effect. What is the "law of effect?" - Correct Answer That responses accompanied by satisfaction will be repeated, while those which produce unpleasantness or discomfort will be stamped out. What are the 7 Key Modalities of Lazarus' BASICID? - Correct Answer B=behavior including acts, habits. and reactions. A=affective responses such as emotions, feelings, and mood S=sensations, including hearing, touch, sight, smell, and taste I=images/the way we perceive ourselves, including memories and dreams C=Cognitions, such as our thoughts, insights, and even our philosophy of life I=interpersonal relationships (the way we interact with others) D=Drugs, that would include alcohol, legal, illegal, and prescription drug usage, diet and nutritional supplementation. Who did Classical Conditioning? - Correct Answer Ivan Pavlov An association that Naturally exists is called what? - Correct Answer Unconditioned. What else is Skinner's operant conditioning referred to as? - Correct Answer Instrumental Learning. What is Pavlovian Conditioning referred to as? - Correct Answer Respondent (reflexes). What is Skinner's conditioning referred to as? - Correct Answer Instrumental/operant. A professional counselor determines fees for monthly consultation services on a job-by- job basis. This is an example of which of the following types of reinforcement schedules? - Correct Answer Variable Ratio When persons who are characteristically shy and withdrawn participate in "assertiveness training," initially they experience uncertainty and self-doubt. Counselors refer to this social psychological concept as: - Correct Answer cognitive dissonance Which type of group is more product than process oriented? - Correct Answer Behavioral A counselor who structures a career counseling group to help group members understand a "fields and levels" approach to careers is following the theory of: - Correct Answer Roe The concept of "career maturity" has been described and researched most extensively by: - Correct Answer Crites What is the most effective time interval between the CS and US? - Correct Answer .5 or 1/2 of a second. When does Stimulus Generalization, also called "second order conditioning," occur? - Correct Answer When a stimulus similar to the CS produces the same reaction. T or F.: Behavior Modification is more Skinnerian? - Correct Answer True T of F.: Behavior Therapy is more Pavlovian? - Correct Answer True. A counselor who says they practice depth psychology technically bases their treatment on what hypothesis? - Correct Answer Freud's topographic hypothesis. What is a paradigm? - Correct Answer A model. What is Concreteness also known as and what is the counselors reason for using this? - Correct Answer Specificity. In an attempt to eliminate vague language. What does biofeedback provide the client and helper with? - Correct Answer Biological Information. These devices teach clients to relax or to control autonomic nervous system functions such as blood pressure, pulse rate, or hand temperature. Any behavior that is not elicited by an obvious stimulus is what? - Correct Answer An operant. What does an EEG do? - Correct Answer Secure feedback related to brain wave rhythms. What is the most difficult intermittent schedule to extinguish? - Correct Answer The Variable Ratio. What is a back-up reinforcer? - Correct Answer An item or an activity which can be purchased using tokens. Logotherapy means healing through what? - Correct Answer Meaning. What is logotherapy based off of? - Correct Answer Existentialism. Define Existentialism. - Correct Answer A humanistic form of helping in which the counselor helps the client discover meaning in their life by doing a deed (an accomplishment), experiencing a value (love), or suffering. Stresses growth and self- actualization. What three worlds do Existentialists speak of? - Correct Answer Umwelt-Phyiscal Mitwelt- Relationship Eigenwelt- Identity Define Phenomenology? - Correct Answer The client's internal personal experience of events. (existential). Define Ontology? - Correct Answer The philosophy of being and existing. (existential). What is William Glasser the Father of? - Correct Answer Reality Therapy.