A general goal of ACT is to help individuals relate
a. more succesfullly to their parents.
b. more successfully to their children.
c. more flexibly to their psychlogical experiences.
d. more flexibly to their spiritual values.
Q. 2In contrast to existential therapies, humanistic therapies assert:
a. that anxiety and guilt are irrelevant to the therapeutic task.
b. that accurate empathic understanding of the client's subjective experience is key to the therapyprocess.
c. the notion of an innate self-actualizing potential.
d. that a nondirective approach is best.
Q. 3A major influence in the development of ACT' was Stephen Hayes's peresonal experience with
a. meditation
b. psychoanalysis.
c. Jungian therapy.
d. schizophrenia.
Q. 4The founder of person-centered therapy is:
a. Carl Rogers. c. Alfred Adler.
b. Frederick Perls. d. Victor Frankl.
Q. 5In ACT, contextual methods are ones that
a. examine strained interpersonal relationships.
b. provide a narrative of events.
c. examine the circumstances that occur with a specific behavior.
d. examine law enforcement issues.
Q. 6A central goal of person-centered therapy is to:
a. promote hardier defense mechanisms.
b. help clients live up to the ideals that they have introjected.
c. encourage clients to look at themselves more objectively and realistically.
d. promote congruence between the person's experienced self and ideal self.
Q. 7Reynolds refers to Asian therapies as quiet therapies, because
a. patients often deal with their thoughts in isolation.
b. much silence exists in the therapy session.
c. therapists use a soft manner in dealing with patients.
d. therapists do not respond, except very briefly, to their patients' statements or questions.