NRNP 6645
NRNP EXAM
6645 PSYCHOTHERAPY
FINAL WITH INDIVIDUALS
EXAM PSYCHOTHERAPY COMPETENCY
WITH INDIVIDUALS ASSESSMENT
COMPETENCY CERTIFIED
ASSESSMENT
NRNP
REVIEW 6645
SOLVED FINAL
QUESTIONS EXAM
ANSWER KEY
EXAMPREP ACTUAL SOLVED QUESTIONS CORRECT ANSWERS
Psychotherapy with Individuals
Comprehensive Competency Assessment 2026/2027
100 Multiple-Choice Questions | 150 Minutes | Passing Score: 75–80%
Aligned with DSM-5-TR, AACN DNP Essentials, PMHNP Certification Competencies & Walden University
Learning Outcomes
Domains Covered:
Psychotherapeutic Modalities & Theoretical Frameworks (25%) | Assessment, Diagnosis & Treatment Planning
(20%) | Therapeutic Alliance & Clinical Skills (15%) | Psychopharmacology Integration with Psychotherapy
(15%) | Special Populations & Contextual Considerations (12%) | Ethical, Legal & Professional Practice (10%) |
Scenario-Based Application (3%)
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━━━ Psychotherapeutic Modalities & Theoretical Frameworks ━━━
1. In cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), the concept of cognitive restructuring primarily targets
which of the following?
A. Unconscious conflicts from early childhood
B. Maladaptive automatic thoughts and cognitive distortions that influence emotional and
behavioral responses
C. Biological imbalances in neurotransmitter systems
D. Interpersonal relationship patterns across the lifespan
Rationale: Cognitive restructuring is the core therapeutic technique in CBT that involves identifying,
evaluating, and modifying maladaptive automatic thoughts and cognitive distortions (such as
catastrophizing, all-or-nothing thinking, overgeneralization, and mind reading) that contribute to
emotional distress and dysfunctional behavior. Unlike psychodynamic therapy, which focuses on
unconscious conflicts from early childhood, CBT operates on the premise that distorted thinking patterns
in the present maintain psychological symptoms. Cognitive restructuring does not target biological
neurotransmitter imbalances directly, nor does it primarily address interpersonal patterns, which are
more central to interpersonal therapy (IPT).
2. A therapist using dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) with a client who engages in self-harm
would prioritize which module as the FIRST area of skill training?
A. Emotion regulation
B. Interpersonal effectiveness
C. Distress tolerance
D. Mindfulness
Rationale: In DBT, distress tolerance skills are prioritized first for clients who engage in self-harm or
suicidal behavior because these skills provide immediate strategies for surviving crisis situations without
making them worse. Distress tolerance teaches clients how to accept and tolerate painful emotions
without resorting to self-destructive behaviors. While mindfulness is considered the foundation of all DBT
skills and is taught concurrently, the distress tolerance module addresses the most acute safety concerns.
Emotion regulation and interpersonal effectiveness are essential but are introduced after the client has
developed basic crisis survival strategies.
3. In psychodynamic psychotherapy, transference refers to:
A. The therapist's emotional reactions to the client based on the therapist's own past experiences
B. The client's displacement of feelings, attitudes, and expectations from significant past
relationships onto the therapist
C. The mutual exchange of empathic understanding between therapist and client
D. The client's resistance to engaging in the therapeutic process
Rationale: Transference in psychodynamic psychotherapy refers to the client's unconscious
displacement of feelings, attitudes, and expectations originally directed toward significant figures from
early life onto the therapist. This phenomenon provides valuable therapeutic material because it allows
the client's internalized relationship patterns and unresolved conflicts to be observed and explored in the
present therapeutic relationship. The therapist's emotional reactions to the client based on the therapist's
own past experiences describe countertransference, not transference. Mutual empathic exchange
characterizes the therapeutic alliance more broadly, and resistance refers to the client's unconscious
opposition to the therapeutic process.
4. A person-centered therapist demonstrates unconditional positive regard by:
A. Agreeing with all of the client's decisions and behaviors
B. Accepting and valuing the client as a person of worth without conditions, while
maintaining genuineness about the therapist's own perspectives
C. Avoiding any expression of the therapist's personal views
D. Providing unlimited access to the therapist outside of session
Rationale: Unconditional positive regard, a core condition of person-centered therapy developed by
Carl Rogers, involves the therapist's consistent acceptance and valuing of the client as a person of inherent
worth, without imposing conditions of acceptance. This does not mean the therapist agrees with all of the
client's behaviors or decisions; rather, the therapist accepts the client while maintaining genuineness
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(congruence) about their own perspectives. Unconditional positive regard is distinguished from blanket
agreement, avoidance of authentic expression, or boundary-less availability, all of which would actually
undermine the therapeutic conditions Rogers described.
5. In motivational interviewing (MI), the OARS framework stands for:
A. Observation, Assessment, Referral, Support
B. Open questions, Affirmations, Reflective listening, Summaries
C. Objectives, Actions, Results, Strategies
D. Orientation, Assessment, Resolution, Synthesis
Rationale: The OARS framework in motivational interviewing consists of Open questions (which
encourage elaboration and exploration), Affirmations (which acknowledge strengths and efforts),
Reflective listening (which demonstrates understanding and helps clarify meaning), and Summaries
(which synthesize what has been discussed and highlight key themes). OARS represents the core
communication skills that MI practitioners use to express empathy, develop discrepancy, roll with
resistance, and support self-efficacy. The other options do not represent recognized MI concepts and
incorrectly associate the OARS acronym with assessment, referral, or strategic planning terminology.
6. A CBT therapist assigns a client the task of logging situations, thoughts, emotions, and
behaviors as they occur throughout the week. This technique is known as:
A. Behavioral activation
B. Thought recording (cognitive diary)
C. Exposure hierarchy construction
D. Guided self-dialogue
Rationale: Thought recording, also known as a cognitive diary or daily thought record, is a core CBT
technique in which clients systematically log activating situations, their automatic thoughts, the resulting
emotions and their intensity, and their behavioral responses. This structured self-monitoring tool enables
clients to identify patterns in their thinking and the relationship between thoughts, emotions, and
behaviors, which is the foundation for cognitive restructuring. Behavioral activation involves scheduling
and engaging in mood-enhancing activities, exposure hierarchy construction involves creating a graded
list of feared situations, and guided self-dialogue involves practicing adaptive self-talk, none of which
involve the structured logging described.
7. Which of the following defense mechanisms involves attributing one's own unacceptable
thoughts or feelings to another person?
A. Denial
B. Projection
C. Sublimation
D. Intellectualization
Rationale: Projection is a defense mechanism in which an individual attributes their own unacceptable
thoughts, feelings, impulses, or motives to another person rather than acknowledging them as their own.
For example, a client who harbors angry feelings toward a coworker might accuse the coworker of being
angry with them. Denial involves refusing to accept reality or facts that are too painful to acknowledge.
Sublimation involves channeling unacceptable impulses into socially acceptable activities.
Intellectualization involves using abstract thinking to avoid experiencing painful emotions associated with
a situation.
8. In DBT, the concept of 'dialectics' refers to:
A. The exclusive focus on changing maladaptive behaviors
B. The simultaneous holding of two seemingly opposing positions, such as acceptance and
change, and finding synthesis within that tension
C. The use of debate and argumentation in therapy sessions
D. The rejection of all emotional experiences as irrational
Rationale: The dialectical foundation of DBT refers to the philosophy of holding two seemingly opposing
truths simultaneously and working toward synthesis. The central dialectic in DBT is between acceptance
(validating the client's experience as it is) and change (helping the client develop new skills and
behaviors). This is exemplified in the therapeutic stance of accepting the client as they are while
simultaneously helping them change. Dialectics does not mean exclusive focus on change, nor does it
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