Author of Attachment in Psychotherapy

1.  Reflect on the ways you have been a “secure base” for your clients. If you have not yet had a therapy client, reflect on what you will do to be a “secure base” for your clients when you begin your work as a therapist. After reflecting, describe what you did do (or will do) behaviorally — what would audio-visual equipment filming you see you do and/or hear you do?

2.  Mikulincer & Shaver state that one of the therapy tasks of a good therapist is to “explore and understand how the client currently relates to other people.” Sometimes this results in the therapist helping the client “become aware of previously unrecognizable biases and failed relational strategies.” How does a therapist do this while still maintaining the role of a “secure base” for the client – and environment in which the client feels safe exploring?

3.  With what components of the Mikulincer & Shaver article did you align or find helpful? Why? Were there any parts of the article with which you disagreed or did not find to be helpful? Why?

4.  David Wallin, author of Attachment in Psychotherapy (2007), states in an interview that “…if we think about therapy as kind of a new attachment relationship, it’s a new attachment relationship that’s between two adults. but also a relationship between the therapist as parent and the patient as baby…We bring those yearnings, those fears, to adult relationships. I think it’s meaningful to think of that as, in a sense, the baby part of us. When that very young part of us can come alive in the relationship with a therapist, there’s an opportunity for that part of us to change and to develop.” Obviously, the relationship between a therapist and a client is not in reality a relationship between a parent and a child.  What really was Wallin talking about in providing this metaphor?

5.  Discuss how a therapist’s own attachment pattern might impact the therapeutic process with that therapist’s clients.

Development of human intelligence

Instructions: Now it is time to develop a topic outline for your argumentative work.

  1. Select one of the following writing prompts:
    • Are emojis beneficial or destructive to communication?
    • Is age a major factor in college success?
    • Is a college degree worth its price, since you will have student loans by the time you graduate?
    • Has the use of technology affected the development of human intelligence?
    • Do introductory courses, such as foreign language, history, algebra, etc. help college students to become more prepared for their degree?
    • Is college for everybody?
    • Internet ethics: Do online ethics need to be strict?
  2. Research the issue selected.
  3. The issue you select should be researchable, arguable, and supported by credible sources in 2-3 pages.
  4. Think of three points of discussion that will hold together your meaningful argument.
  5. Use the information from your research to develop a topic outline. Create an outline following these steps:
    • In Microsoft Word, outlines are also called multilevel lists. The following steps show how to write a new outline from scratch.
    • Click Home and, in the Paragraph group, click the arrow next to Multilevel List.
      • Choose an outline style from the List Library. Point to each outline style in the library to view all the levels for the style.
      • Start typing to begin the list. Press Enter when you finish the line to start a new line.
      • To start a new list level, press the Tab key and begin typing.
      • Press Enter to return to the previous list level.

Explicit expression of stereotypes

4-1 LL (200 words and one reference)

Cognitive processes store information into the memory affects their judgement and behavior towards others from different backgrounds. When an individual is raised with different perspectives poured into them, they take on these perspectives and incorporate them into how they view life. According to Amodio (2014), prejudice stems from a mechanism of survival, built on cognitive systems that ‘structure’ the physical world, its function in modern society is complex and its effects are often causes damage. Many of these instances are not intentional, its more that it was how their brain was wired. The impact of culture on prejudice makes it common for individuals to normalize prejudice, because it was approved or promoted in their culture. According to Uhlmann (2013), Prejudices are often a way for a group of higher social status to explain and rationalize their privilege position in society. This is a main stance to consider with the gap of benefits and opportunities that are available to those of the minority (Or as they labeled). Once stereotypes and prejudice are formed, they become self perpetuating because they grow stronger inside the mind, similarly to the information we choose to study and gain insight on. The roots of prejudice can be found in the cognitive and emotional processes (Branscombe, 2016). By rewiring these processes, the root can be diminished.

4-1 KG (200 words and one reference)

A person’s beliefs and expectations regarding a particular group constitute the cognitive component of the prejudicial attitude. The cognitive approach, (cognitive theory of prejudice), suggests that prejudice is a function of cognitive processes where stereotypic information about social groups, stored in memory, is automatically activated and affects people’s judgments and behavior toward target group members. An example of this is believing that a product marketed by a celebrity is more valuable. While people like to believe that they are rational and logical, the fact is that people are continually under the influence of cognitive biases. These biases distort thinking, influence beliefs, and sway the decisions and judgments people make daily. These biases happen because we can’t evaluate every detail and event when forming thoughts and opinions. Because of this, we often rely on mental shortcuts that speed up our ability to make judgments, but sometimes lead to bias ( Saposnik, Redelmeier, Ruff & Tobler 2016). The psychological bases for prejudice are people’s values, the ways they see themselves and others, their sense of social identity, and social norms that define who is included in or excluded from social groups.  The cognitive dimensions of prejudice relate to issues such as stereotypes and beliefs about outgroup members. Stereotype measures involve the endorsement of negative stereotypes about members of the outgroup. The source of prejudices comes from social differences, conformity, frustration-aggression, social identity, social categories, attribution, and stereotypes.  Prejudice develops because of group formation, identification, and continuous interaction. Once groups are formed, group members learn the appropriate attitudes about themselves and other groups from others. A prejudiced person may not act on their attitude. Therefore, someone can be prejudiced towards a certain group but not discriminate against them. Also, prejudice includes all three components of an attitude (affective, behavioral, and cognitive), whereas discrimination just involves behavior. In terms of their development, both classic and contemporary research demonstrates that stereotypes and prejudice are learned through social communication and interaction. Stereotypes are just as strong, and prejudice is just as negative, about groups with which we have little contact as they are about groups with which we have frequent, everyday interaction. These results are difficult to account for from an outgroup-interaction perspective but follow naturally from the sharing of social norms among ingroup members. Furthermore, social norms have a strong influence on both the explicit expression of stereotypes and prejudice as well as the implicit cognitive representations of group beliefs–the knowledge itself (Sechrist & Stangor 2001). When people hold prejudicial attitudes toward others, they tend to view everyone with the defining characteristic as being all the same. They paint every individual who holds specific characteristics or beliefs with an extremely broad brush and fails to look at each person as a unique individual. Sometimes, prejudice is confused with discrimination. While prejudice involves having negative attitudes toward members of a certain group, discrimination occurs when those feelings are acted upon. There are numerous types of prejudice, some of which include: Ageism, Classism, Homophobia, Racism, & Sexism to name a few. Beliefs that are held about a specific group of people, in terms of their traits, behavior, and even characteristics are what we refer to as stereotypes. Stereotypes as cognitive frameworks that influence the processing of social information (Branscombe & Baron, 2016).  A Stereotype is a simplified assumption about a group based on prior experiences or beliefs & is self-perpetuating in our minds, growing stronger with use just like information we actively try to cement in our memory. Going through the world making assumptions about other people with stereotypes we’ve learned is another form of mental practice. With more rehearsal, those assumptions get stronger over time, even when we have no tangible evidence to back them up stereotypes are the cognitive component of intergroup biases. Social scientists have uncovered the unsettling truth that no matter how egalitarian a person purports to be, their unconscious mind holds some racist, sexist or ageist thoughts. But a new study finds that this may say less about the person and more about the culture that surrounds him or her. The new study finds that while people are quick to associate word pairs that recall stereotypes (think “black – poor” versus “black – goofy”), this tendency is rooted not in the social meaning of the words, but in the likelihood of the words appearing together in literature and media. In other words, this implicit prejudice is driven more by culture than by any innate horribleness in the person (Pappas 2011.)

4-2 KK (200 words and one reference)

Institutions that treat individuals from diverse backgrounds, such as different races, ages, or even gender, differently than the majority of individuals is what we refer to as institutional bias (Branscombe & Baron, 2016). This went on a lot many generations ago in schools where the bulk of pupils were African American and pupils from another race were dealt with differently, this applies the new way around where we called “white school” where African Americans or pupils from another race were the minority. These minority groups are and still are being treated differently from those that are not in the group as you see institutional bias is still living today.

The following play a big part in institutional biases attitudes, stereotypes, and prejudices. It is these actions toward the minority groups that affect and shape how they are treated. As an individual, you may have never mistreated a minority group if it was not for these biases that have been spread. These attitudes and behaviors may not have been negative if it wasn’t for the influences of the surroundings.

 

Cultural influence can jolt institutional biases if the system does not have great programs in place that prevent any cultural bias and injustice. If the system does not take steps to stop any injustice, it can rapidly turn into an institutional bias that can hurt, and negatively jolt those of the minority groups.

Outline of Presentation slide

Submission Instructions

For this assignment, you will create an engaging presentation based on your argumentative essay.   The presentation should have a minimum of __ – __ slides.

1. Use the information from your  outline to fashion the presentation.

2. Include the following:

·

· Introduction

Title Slide

 

Title of your presentation (your debatable issue)

Your full name

Class name & section number

Your institution (Ana G. Mendez University).

Outline of the Presentation slide

A roadmap of the talk

Thesis statement slide

Include an interesting media that reveals the significance of your topic and your thesis statement.

Body

Include the key themes and concepts and specific necessary details that support your thesis statement and address the opposing view as well.

Incorporate media that illustrate and back up your claim.

Use enough slides to convey your paper contents, but not so many that you must rush through them to complete the presentation in __ minutes.

Conclusion

 

Use some form of multimedia that leaves your audience with something to think about, such as:

Reconsidering their thinking about the issue you discussed

Taking action

Thinking about a related issue

Make sure to emphasize why your essay and analysis matter.

Reference Slide

When citing the work of other authors, include citations and references using APA 7th edition style to respect their intellectual property and avoid plagiarism.

3. Before you submit your presentation:

 

Revise the slides:  Look again at your presentation and see what in the body is consistent with the essay and what is unconnected. This process may include adding information as well as deleting elements that, upon reconsideration, prove redundant or unnecessary.

Edit:  Fine-tune the language. Read with fresh eyes and look fore grammar, mechanics, misspellings and awkward wording and adapt for the sake of clarity.

4. Your work must be original and must not contain material copied from books or the internet.

Review of Important Information

Topic: Working with youth who experienced bullying

Please include age, range, gender, etc.

Component I: Review of Important Information

· Conduct a thorough search of your topic. You will need at least 10 sources for your paper. You may use books, peer- reviewed journal articles, and up to 3 website sources (for ideas for the creative activity only). Note: Please use current journal articles published within the last six years.

· The first part of your paper should review and synthesize important information about your special topic from the resources you identified (this should be about 2-3 pages).

2. Be sure to cite all sources within your paper using APA 7 formatting. Please see the APA 7 manual for instructions and examples of how to use citations.

Component II: Identify a Counseling Theory

· Next, identify a counseling theory that we have studied this semester that you would use when working with a child/adolescent with this presenting concern. Please discuss why you believe this theory or approach would be appropriate (this should be about 1-2 pages).

Component II: Develop a Creative Activity

· Finally, identify a specific age of a child/adolescent with this concern you would like to work with and develop a creative activity/experience that would be appropriate to use with this child/adolescent. Describe how this activity/experience fits with your theory (this portion should be about 1 page). Although you can get ideas about creative activities from websites or journal articles, please note that this must be an original creative activity that you have developed.

· The paper should be between 5-6 pages long not including the title page and reference list and written in APA style. You do not need to include an abstract

 

https://college.cengage.com/counseling/shared/videos/player-henderson.html?video=14_ruthlee_int

https://college.cengage.com/counseling/shared/videos/player-henderson.html?video=14_ruthlee_int

The emergence of human emotions

Choose one concept, research finding, or question that stood out to you in your readings and content assigned for this week. Find an empirical research article about this that was published in the scientific literature and provide a summary of that article here answering the following questions. Attach the article to your post, and provide an APA style reference for it at the bottom of your post.

1. What is the item that stood out to you and why?

2. What did the authors of the study you selected examine in their research? What did they hypothesize and why (rationale)?

3. What methods did they use?

4. What were the most meaningful findings the authors reported?

5. What is one limitation to their study?

6. How do the findings from this study help you better understand the content from this week?

Part 2

Include a screenshot of the graph you plan to use for hypothetical results in the final paper.  You may use the graph from Week 5 draft and modify if needed.

Explain the graph and how it supports your hypothesis.

  • Chapter 15: Lewis, M. (2016). The emergence of human emotions. In L. Feldman Barrett, M. Lewis, & J. M. Haviland-Jones (Eds.),  Handbook of Emotions, 4 th Ed.  (pp. 272-292). New York, NY: Guilford Press.
  • Chapter 17: Widen, S. C. (2016). The development of children’s concepts of emotion. In L. Feldman Barrett, M. Lewis, & J. M. Haviland-Jones (Eds.), Handbook of Emotions, 4th Ed. (pp. 307-318). New York, NY: Guilford Press.
  • Chapter 20: Somerville, L. H. (2016). Emotional development in adolescence. In L. Feldman Barrett, M. Lewis, & J. M. Haviland-Jones (Eds.), Handbook of Emotions, 4th Ed. (pp. 350-368). New York, NY: Guilford Press.
  • Chapter 18: Mather, M. & Ponzio, A. (2016). Emotion and aging. In L. Feldman Barrett, M. Lewis, & J. M. Haviland-Jones (Eds.), Handbook of Emotions, 4th Ed. (pp. 319-335). New York, NY: Guilford Press.

In addition, read the following article:

  • Article:  Leclerc, C. M. & Kensinger, E. A. (2008). Effects of age on detection of emotional information. Psychology and Aging, 23(1), 209

Differences between suicide and attempted suicide

Have you ever known someone who committed suicide? If you are comfortable, share the answers to the following.  If you do not know anyone personally, think about someone in news or other and gather the information by doing research:

·What type of behaviors did this person exhibit that are in line with the warning signs outlined in the textbook (or outside research)?

·Was there a relationship to gender? Age? Socioeconomic status?

·What are some of the biopsychosocial perspectives on reasons people this person may have committed suicide?

·Compare and contrast differences between the person who committed suicide and someone who attempted suicide but did not follow through.

Counseling Disposition Reflection Worksheet

Complete the Counseling Disposition Reflection Worksheet.

You are not required to submit this assignment to LopesWrite.

This assignment meets the following NASAC Standards:

18) Understand diverse racial and ethnic cultures, including their distinct patterns of interpreting reality, world view, adaptation, and communication, and to incorporate the special needs of minority groups and the differently abled into clinical practice.

19) Understand the importance of self-awareness in one’s personal, professional, and cultural life.

85) Adapt counseling strategies to the individual characteristics of the client, including (but not limited to): disability, gender, sexual orientation, developmental level, acculturation, ethnicity, age, and health status.

102) Sensitize others to issues of cultural identity, ethnic background, age, and gender role or identity in prevention, treatment, and recovery.

119) Recognize the importance of individual differences by gaining knowledge about personality, cultures, lifestyles, and other factors influencing client behavior, and applying this knowledge to practice.

121) Conduct culturally appropriate self-evaluations of professional performance, applying ethical, legal, and professional standards to enhance self-awareness and performance.

Comments regarding the influence of culture

This option requires you to write a paper that reviews research (the majority of which should be from the past 10 years) related to a topic of your choice that impacts human growth and development. You might want to select a topic about which you would like to learn more or a topic that interests you for some reason. You should use a minimum of 10 peer-reviewed references. Be sure to include in your paper your comments regarding the influence of culture and environment on the topic area you are covering . Your paper should be structured to include the following sections: (1) introduction of the topic and why you chose it, (2) a literature review section that focuses on how this topic influences the domains of development (biological, cognitive, socioemotional), (3) your critique of the research you used, (4) implications of the research findings for counselors, and (5) intervention recommendations that you have based upon the research findings. The length of your paper must be at least 10 pages and no longer than 15 pages. Your paper should be written in APA 7 style. A rubric that will be used for grading will be distributed to you.

 

 

 

 

RESEARCH PAPER RUBRIC

 

10 points 11-14 points 15 points

Depth of Thought & Analysis (15 points) Did not cite min. of 10 references &/or did not cover all 5 required sections of the paper; poor level of thought & analysis in addressing what was covered in paper (reported information but didn’t show evidence of critical thinking or reflection on the data) 10 references cited; covered all 5 required sections of the paper; provided mainly surface level thought & analysis applied in addressing assignment aspects covered in the paper-mainly reporting data vs giving one’s thoughts/analysis of what was read Cited at least 10 references; covered all 5 required sections of the paper; addressed all aspects of the assignment with depth of thought & analysis—writer is involved with the topic vs merely doing an assignment or “reporting” data

2 points 3-4 points 5 points

Organization of Paper Content (5 points) Main ideas of the paper are unclear; content is difficult to read & understand; paper is poorly organized Supporting points are clear & readable; organization, transitions, sections of paper are mostly clear & organized Very clear structure; paper is very well organized

2 points 3-4 points 5 points

Quality of writing & grammar (5 points) Major grammatical &/or writing errors that make paper difficult to read & understand. May be spelling errors &/or errors in punctuation or capitalization; may be frequent proofing errors; or writing does not flow & is very disjointed—paper jumps from topic to topic or sentence to sentence without connecting ideas Overall, good quality writing & grammar; a few spelling, punctuation, grammar, capitalization or proofing errors Consistent high-quality & appropriate formal style of writing; no spelling errors; no errors in grammar, punctuation or capitalization; writing flows well from sentence to sentence & section to section

2 points 3-4 points 5 points

Formatting Requirements/APA 7 Style (5 points) Paper is less than 10 or more than 15 pages &/or missing multiple APA 7 formatting requirements &/or not using APA 7 format & structure; did not cite sources as needed or major/multiple errors in citation formatting; no reference page Paper is at least 10 and no more than 15 pages; a few minor errors in APA 7 sections, citations, or other formatting; may have missed a very few citations of sources in paper and/or reference page Paper is at least 10 and no more than 15 pages; follows APA 7 formatting guidelines; includes all required APA 7 paper sections; all sources properly cited in both paper & reference page

Response and crisis intervention plan

In this course, you learned about crisis and disaster response and trauma-informed practices. Throughout the course, you have read research articles and gathered your own sources related to this topic. Last week, you crafted an annotated outline of your disaster response plan and crisis intervention plan. This week, you will expand your annotated outline from last week.

THE ANNOTATED OUTLINE IS UPLOADED.

Your Signature Assignment includes two (2) parts. You will combine both parts, and then, submit one document to the assignment portal.

Part 1: Disaster Response Plan

WILDFIRES  is the case study.

1.create a comprehensive response plan that addresses your selected case study.

In your Disaster Response Plan, be sure to include the different steps and/or phases of your specific response strategies.

You will begin by describing the type of disaster and providing specific details about where, how, and when the disaster occurred.

Indicate who this disaster impacts and how.

Then, using all the knowledge you have acquired throughout this course, create a trauma-informed response plan that addresses the disaster, including strategies to assess survivor risks and strengths.

Your response strategies must cater to the specific needs of the survivor(s) of the disaster and incorporate follow-up professional resources and opportunities to promote post-traumatic growth. Remember to include a summary of your case study as well as a link to the case study for reference.

Part 2: Crisis Intervention Plan

Similar to part 1, you will search for and select a case study from one of these three crisis areas: (1) Health Crisis, (2) Relational Crisis, or (3) Economic Crisis.

Review more research work on your selected area, then develop a full intervention or treatment plan that addresses your selected case study, including strategies to assess survivor risks and strengths.

In your Crisis Intervention Plan, describe the type of crisis, who it impacts, and how it impacts them. Your intervention plan must include specific trauma informed strategies that respond to the needs of an individual, family, or community in your selected case study.

Draw on specific resources in your local community or describe the ideal community resources to support the intervention plan and promote post-traumatic growth. Remember to include a summary of your case study as well as a link to the case for reference.

Length: 12-14 pages, not including title and reference pages (6-7 pages for each section)

References: Include a minimum of 10 scholarly resources.