Solutions
a safe, nurturing, accepting, and reliable relationship Correct
Answers The counseling relationship is central to TF-CBT
because trauma can result in lack of safety and trust, and
therefore requires
a. a safe, nurturing, accepting, and reliable relationship
b. awareness of the unconscious and preparation for future
problem events
c. a strong counselor presence and reality training in order to
keep the client grounded in reality
d. a highly structured, rigid environment with clear expectations
to create a sense of reliability and clarity of expectations
American Indian and Alaskan Indian children Correct Answers
According to the text, childhood trauma is estimated at 22% and
depression at 10-30% among
a. American Indian and Alaskan Indian children
b. African American children
c. children in Cambodia
d. Latino children
cognitive triangle; cognitive coping skills Correct Answers TF-
CBT uses the ___ and ___ both before and after the trauma
narrative in order to help children learn to distinguish between
thoughts and feelings and challenge unhelpful beliefs.
a. counselor; counselor empathy
b. cognitive triangle; cognitive coping skills
c. breath; focus on the breath
d. cognitive assessment; cognitive restructuring
, continuous change Correct Answers The dialectical world view
is made up of three primary characteristics: interrelatedness or
wholeness, polarity, and
a. transformation
b. continuous change
c. enlightenment
d. integrations
diagnosis and the medical model Correct Answers Trauma-
focused cognitive-behavioral therapy (TF-CBT) is an evidence-
based short term, strengths based approach which resolves
trauma and increases self-efficacy. It integrates all of the
following elements EXCEPT:
a. family systems theory
b. humanistic approaches
c. diagnosis and the medical model
d. child development theory
dialectic of unwavering centeredness and compassionate
flexibility Correct Answers In DBT, rigid goals are not the
purpose, but rather compassionate responsiveness that allows for
flexibility while maintaining unwavering clearness of purpose.
This is referred to as:
a. dialectic of embracing the good and bad without judgment
b. dialectic of nurturing and benevolence
c. dialectic of client and counselor agreement
d. dialectic of unwavering centeredness and compassionate
flexibility