Counseling the Culturally Diverse. Laura Smith L.
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      CHAPTER OBJECTIVES

      1 Compare and contrast similarities and differences between “traditional counseling/clinical practice” and culturally responsive counseling.

      2 Understand the etic and emic orientation to multicultural counseling.

      3 Become cognizant of differences between counseling/clinical competence and multicultural counseling competence and cultural humility.

      4 Identify Eurocentric assumptions inherent in our standards of clinical practice.

      5 Discuss and understand the characteristics of the three levels of personal identity.

      6 Develop awareness of possible differences in counseling culturally diverse clients who differ in race, gender, sexual orientation, and other group identities.

      7 Provide examples of ways that other special populations may constitute a distinct cultural group.

      8 Define multicultural counseling and therapy and cultural competence.

      9 Define cultural humility, cultural comfort, and cultural opportunity.

      10 Explain how cultural humility is different from cultural competence.

      Full Counseling Session video (Part I): “The Superordinate Aspects of Multicultural Counseling and Therapy” (supervision between “Scott” and “David”

      The following is the third counseling session between Dr. D. (a White counselor) and Gabriella, a 29‐year‐old single Latina, who was born and raised in Brazil but came to the United States when she was 10 years old.

       Dr. D:

      So how did it go last week with Russell [White boyfriend of six months].

       Gabriella:

      Okay, I guess. [seems withdrawn and distracted]

       Dr. D:

      You don't sound too sure to me.

       Gabriella:

      What do you mean?

       Dr. D:

      Well, from the last session, I understood that you were going to talk to him [Russell] about your decision to live together, but that you wanted to clarify what moving into his apartment meant for him.

       Gabriella:

      I didn't get a chance to talk about it. I was going to bring it up, but I had another attack, so I didn't get a chance. It was awful! [begins to fidget in the chair] Why does this always happen to me?

       Dr. D:

      Tell me what happened.

       Gabriella:

      I don't know. I had a disagreement with him, a big stupid argument over Jennifer Lopez's song “Booty.”

       Dr. D:

      “Booty”?

       Gabriella:

      Yeah, he kept watching СКАЧАТЬ