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Mors 200 Arts Final - Psychology Vocabulary Part 3
This deck covers key psychology vocabulary terms and concepts relevant to the Mors 200 Arts Final, focusing on definitions and applications in counseling and psychology.
According to Carl Rogers, accepting the client or counselee as he or she is, and for what he or she is without imposing judgments or stipulations.
Positive Regard
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Key Terms
Term
Definition
According to Carl Rogers, accepting the client or counselee as he or she is, and for what he or she is without imposing judgments or stipulations.
Positive Regard
The study of death.
Thanatology
A statement or action designed or perceived to create anxiety in an individual's life.
Threat
Those appropriate and helpful acts of counseling that come after the funeral.
Post-Funeral Counseling (Aftercare)
Listening in which the goal is to judge the quality or accuracy of speaker's remarks.
Evaluative Listening
A deliberate act of self-destruction.
Suicide
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| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
According to Carl Rogers, accepting the client or counselee as he or she is, and for what he or she is without imposing judgments or stipulations. | Positive Regard |
The study of death. | Thanatology |
A statement or action designed or perceived to create anxiety in an individual's life. | Threat |
Those appropriate and helpful acts of counseling that come after the funeral. | Post-Funeral Counseling (Aftercare) |
Listening in which the goal is to judge the quality or accuracy of speaker's remarks. | Evaluative Listening |
A deliberate act of self-destruction. | Suicide |
The region of the mind that is beyond awareness especially impulses and desires not directly known to a person. | Unconscious |
Complete sentence describing the central idea of a speech, usually found in the first paragraph. | Thematic (Thesis Statement) |
A statement or action which creates anxiety in an individual's life. | Threat |
Giving the appearance of listening. | Pseudolistening |
The experience of the emotion of grief. | Bereavement |
The speed at which a speaker utters words. | Rate |
The relatively stable set of perceptions each individual holds of himself or herself. | Self-Concept |
Anytime someone helps someone else with a problem. | Counseling (Jackson) |
An adjustment process which involves grief or sorrow over a period of time and helps in the reorganization of the life an an individual following a loss or death of someone loved. | Mourning |
Counselor takes a live speaking role, asking questions, suggesting courses of action, etc. | Directive Counseling |
The emotional associations of a term. | Connotation |
The state of estrangement an individual feels in social settings that are viewed as foreign, unpredictable or unacceptable. | Alienation |
The right of finality in a funeral service preceding cremation, earth burial, entombment or burial at sea. | Committal Service |
Rules that govern society. | Law |
Those appropriate and helpful acts of counseling that comes after the funeral. | Aftercare (Post-Funeral Counseling) |
The ability to communicate the belief that everyone possesses the capacity and right to choose alternatives and make decisions. | Respect (Wolfelt) |
Life events and minor hassles that exert pressure or strain. | Stress |
Detailed examples of adjustments, choices or alternatives available to the client or counselee, from which a course of action may be selected. | Illustrating |
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome | AIDS |