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Psych 520 Midterm Exam with precise detailed solutions

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Psych 520 Midterm Exam with precise detailed solutions

Institution
PSY 520
Course
PSY 520

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2



Psych 520 Midterm Exam with precise detailed || || || || || || ||




solutions


Who were the beginning movements/organizations that brought work with families to a
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profession platform? - ✔✔● Charity Organization Society: helps families cope with the stress of
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urban living through in-home therapy support and concrete assistance. Sought to assess and
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understand family and individual needs || || || ||




o Staff called themselves "friendly visitors"
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o Goal - help families handle stress of urban life (everyone)
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● Settlement House Movement: Viewed family problems as resulting from debilitating
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environmental conditions. Sought to change societal, city, and neighborhood conditions that had a || || || || || || || || || || || ||




delirious impact on the family
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o Both organizations forced families to assimilate to White culture → more so Settlement House
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o Gave attention to the family within the broader environment
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The Marriage Counseling Movement
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o No one specifically trained as marriage counseling - diverse group of counselors were clergy,
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lawyers, gynecologists, social workers, and college professors (family life specialists)
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o Most people were seeking everyday facts of marriage and family life, not resolving relationship
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issues
o Included premarital counseling, guidance to newlywed and married couples,
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support/information on legal and social obligations regarding marriage || || || || || || ||




Child Guidance Movement || ||




● Initial goal of child guidance movement was to address juvenile delinquency while teaching
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parents to understand their children and respond to them with the appropriate use of
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love/discipline
● This movement helped practitioners begin to understand the child, they began to look for social
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and family dynamics that may influence the child's psychological difficulties
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What influence did Freud have on the understanding of families? - ✔✔● Freud believed
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unconscious sexual and aggressive instincts and the expression of these instincts are shaped by || || || || || || || || || || || || || ||




early childhood relationships and their parents
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,2


● Parents influence child's drives → put mothers down
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What is symbolic interactionism? - ✔✔● These principles are shaped by the meaning people
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assign to those interactions since the meaning is not inherent in those interactions
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o Humans have capacity to assign meaning to people, things, events because language allows
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naming and generating symbols that have meaning/value
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• Structural/Functionalism: the role of family to rear a child to fit in society (the family's role
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within social order) || ||




o Family should raise children to be productive members of society
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o Teach morals and ethics and establish goals so that individual kids will carry that on out of the
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family
• These theories provided conceptual context that impacted some of the basic theoretical
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formulations of family development theory, psychosocial theories about the family, and family
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therapy.


First Generation - ✔✔influenced by systems theory. The therapists were observers and believed
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the right models could "manipulate" systemic interactions
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o Assumptions/bias were based on middle-class or working-class notions of the ideal family and
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gender equality || ||




o Examples of theories: structural, family of origin, communicative, symbolic experiential,
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strategic


Second Generation - ✔✔critiqued first gen as "mechanical" and could be "manipulated" by the
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"expert" therapist. Also started to take a greater recognition of multicultural differences
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o Examples of theories: Solution-focused and narrative
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Third Generation - ✔✔: Integration of clinical judgments with research evidence, greater
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recognition of disparities in social status of ethnic minorities, and increased concern about gender
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biases
o Examples of theories: CBT
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,2


How the "traditional family" was perceived and known as - ✔✔▪ 1950s construction of family
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represented the ideal, which in reality represented middle and upper-middle class White families || || || || || || || || || || || || ||




who could afford such lifestyles
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▪ Issues of social inequality based on race, gender, and sexual orientation, along with family
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issues like marital strife, domestic violence, and child/physical/sexual abuse had not emerged in
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public consciousness as social and family problems || || || || || ||




The "rings" of Brofenbrenner's ecological model - ✔✔1) The microsystem is the individual and
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those within his or her immediate life space.
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a. Grandma - lives down the street but is there everyday after school
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b. Family, school, health services, peers, daycare, religious organization
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c. Kids - family, peers, school, neighborhood
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d. Adults - significant other, immediate family (origin/procreation), work, neighborhood
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2) The mesosystem represents the relationships between the members within an individual's
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microsystem
a. School, teachers
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b. Primary mesosystem relationship for kids may include their parent's interaction with school
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c. Adults - significant other and their parents/siblings
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3) The exosystem includes those systems that the individual may never deal with directly but that
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can influence the individual's well-being.
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o Extended family and neighbors, school board, parents' economic situation, mass media, social
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services and health care, government agencies || || || || ||




o Institutional structures: local government, voluntary associations
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4) Finally there are macrosystems, which include the cultural context of family life.
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o Attitudes and ideologies of the culture
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o Values, traditions, laws, cultural factors, larger social institutions that impact family well-being
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Define and apply "homeostasis" - ✔✔● Family Homeostasis: Family as an organizational entity
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attempts to maintain equilibrium, stability, and order in its overall functioning || || || || || || || || || ||




o The tendency for a system to remain relatively stable and in a constant state of balance.
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, 2


● Stability maintained through enforcement of family norms, rules, mutually reinforcing
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feedback loops ||




● Family rules are like a baseline norm that regulates family interaction within a range of
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acceptable behaviors (acceptable range = balance), when interactions deviate from family rules,
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homeostasis is impacted || ||




o Ex: divorce, having an elderly parent or child move in
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● Ability to adapt and change is a marker of the family's ability to maintain homeostasis
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The stages of the family life span - ✔✔1. Marriage/couple/pair bonding
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i. Committing to the relationship
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ii. Formulating roles and rules
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iii. Becoming a couple while separating form the family of origin
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iv. Making compromises and negotiating around concrete and personal needs
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2. Families with young children
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i. Re-stabilizing the couple unit with a triangle
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ii. Bonding with the child and integrating them into the family
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iii. Realigning relationships with one another, deciding on work or career or domestic chores
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3. Families with school-aged children
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i. Allowing greater independence of children
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ii. Opening family boundaries to accommodate new social institutions and new people
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iii. Understanding and accepting role change
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4. Families with teenagers
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i. Dealing with teen demands for independence through appropriate boundary adjustments
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ii. Adjusting to a new definition of personal autonomy
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iii. Rule changes, limit setting, and role negotiation
|| || || || || || ||

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Institution
PSY 520
Course
PSY 520

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Uploaded on
January 4, 2026
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
Type
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