CEFS 601 Exam 2 Liberty University
- Emotionally-Focused Couple Therapy is
- Bowen’s concept of societal regression extends his view to
- Two leading family therapists, Don Jackson and Murray Bowen, trained under American psychiatrist
- In his family intervention techniques, Bowen presented himself as a
- A core concept in the contextual theory of Boszormenyi-Nagy’s approach is
- Wynne’s concept of a rubber fence refers to
- The double-bind concept was first introduced to account for the development of:
- According to Ackerman, when change and growth within a family system becomes restricted reflects
- Emotional cutoff, according to Bowen is
- Kohut views narcissism as:
- With his concept of self-differentiation, Bowen argues for
- Family Sculpting is a
- Relying heavily on learning theory at first, _________________ theory first came into prominence in the 1960s:
- By symbiosis, Bowen is referring to
- A trio of Freudian concepts remain of vital importance to any __________ model.
- Bowen’s work with families tended to be
- Bowen studied families with schizophrenic members, especially their
- The Family Life Chronology is essentially
- A spouse who projects undesired aspects of oneself onto a partner and then fights these characteristics in that mate is engaging in
- In the famous case of Little Hans, in which the child feared leaving his house fear of being bitten by a horse;
- By “tickling the defenses” Ackerman:
- Satire suggests that people handle their communications with one another by playing one of five roles. Which of the following is not one of those roles?
- All except one of the following can be considered to adhere to an experiential model. Which one does not belong?
- Emotionally-Focused Couple Therapy
- Emotionally-focused therapists first try to
- Family systems therapists, in Bowen’s approach,
- The primary survival triad, according to Satir, refers to
- According to Kerr, an emotional cutoff
- When a child internalizes the image of his mother into a good object and a bad object, he is engaging in:
- The group therapy technique whereby a stage is utilized and the patient acts out significant life events in front of an audience is called:
- Object relations theorists believe the infant’s need for what influences the development of the self?
- One criticism of the double-bind concept is its:
- According to Whitaker, the battle for initiative must
- Pochaska and Norcross (2010) contend the model orientation of family therapy today is:
- One of Bowen’s innovative research techniques was:
- Sullivan emphasized all but one of the following as emerging from early mother-child relationships. Which one does not belong?
- Generally speaking, experiential therapists believe that change resides
- One highlight of Framo’s approach is the ability to lead a couple through several treatment stages. From the list below, which is one of these stages?
- A fundamental goal of object relations family therapists is for the family to _____?
- For which of the following is interpretation of dreams and fantasies an essential part of the therapy?
- A holding environment is a key element in:
- As a Gestalt therapist, Kempler stresses a position of…
- When Beels and Ferber classified the leading family therapists in 1969, they distinguished two types, conductors and
- A schizophrenogenic mother is one who:
- The focus of object relations theory is:
- The study of paradoxes of communication in animals as well as humans is associated with the name of:
- Family therapy gained its initial legitimacy during the 1950’s by:
- Object Relations Family Therapy:
- In a marital schism situation, each partner:
- Object Relations Family Therapy emphasizes the basic human need for: