Question

Level 1. Denial, The negative alpha solution. The client seems unable to accommodate new data from the counselor or therapist. The client will fail to deal with the conflict or contradiction, make an abrupt topic shift, or show a clearly incorrect "off-the-wall" response.
Level 2. Partial examination, The more mature alpha solution. The client deals with only a portion of the issue or counselor's statement. The client may over-generalize, delete, or distort what has been said, but not as seriously as in Level 1. You may find irrational ideas and some blindness to problems.
Level 3. Acceptance and recognition, Beta solution. The client recognizes the situation as it is and the client's comment, feeling, or thought seems close to that presented by the therapist, but nothing new is added by the client. This level characterizes homeostasis or no change. Score as Beta if the client tends to describe a situation, event, or self-picture fairly clearly, but tends to leave it there.
Level 4. Generation of a new solution, Early gamma solution. In response to the counselor, the client moves to the creation of something new. The client has added something that was not there before. At times, the underlying conflict may remain ï‚¾ï€ acceptance of insoluble problems begins here.
Level 5. Transcendence, Full gamma solution. The client has arrived at a new synthesis, a new way of thinking, behaving, or feeling. These are relatively rare moments in counseling and therapy and may represent the development of useful or important insights, the ability to engage in a truly new way of behaving, the generation of a new ability to engage emotionally.
You will now be given a variety of counselor-client situations. The possible client responses are in random order. Please classify each client response at one of the five levels.
Carl Rogers
(To Mrs. Oak) "It's an experience that's awfully hard to put down accurately into words, and yet I get a sense of difference in this relationship, from the feeling that 'This is mine,' 'I am doing it,' and so on, to a somewhat different feeling that ï‚¾ï€ 'I could let you in'."
a. "Yes, it's as though that's how it should be. There's a feeling that this is good. I
feel that it's right for me. I feel more open. I feel more me."
b. "Well, sort of. I do want to be close, but it doesn't seem safe."
c. "I do so much for others. Why do you accuse me like that?"
d. "Yes, I am doing it and I feel I could let others in."
e. "It feels like a beginning, it's inevitable."

Answer

This answer is hidden. It contains 15 characters.