|  |  |  Healthcare Training Institute - Quality Education since 1979CE for Psychologist, Social Worker, Counselor, & MFT!!
 Section 5Perspectives in Multicultural Counseling
 |  |  Read content below or listen to audio.Left click audio track to Listen; Right click  to "Save..." mp3
 In the last section, we discussed the reflective approach to  supervision, and methods to encourage the growth of the reflective process in  supervisees and trainee supervisors. The three dimensions of the reflective  approach are the intention to examine one’s own actions, maintaining openness  to alternatives, and the ability to use theory and past experiences to refine  clinical technique. In this section, we will discuss the three common perspectives  in multi-cultural counseling. We will also discuss techniques by which to  encourage the growth of multi-cultural counseling skills within supervisees. Three Common Perspectives in Multi-Cultural Counseling  ♦  Perspective #1 - Universalist Perspective In my experience, I have observed three common perspectives  of multicultural counseling. The first of these is the universalist perspective. I explain to my supervisees that in this perspective, the therapist assumes  that issues of culture are secondary to issues of individual personality, and  that development is common across all cultures. This development becomes the  focus of counseling, and on the essential human nature that all clients share.
 Clearly, under this perspective, treatment focuses on the particular disorder  of the client and the particular skills required by the therapist to treat this  disorder. Thus, the universalist does not consider cultural factors such as  race, gender, and class to be relevant concerns, and if the topics come up in  therapy, they are presented and interpreted by the client. ♦ Perspective #2 - Particularist Perspective According to Tyler,  Brome, and Williams, the second perspective is the particularist perspective, in which the primary factor in a client’s worldview and sense  of self is largely the result of a particular cultural factor, such as  ethnicity or gender. Thus the primary  focus of counseling is to gain an understanding of what this factor is, and how  it has affected the development of the client’s disorder.
 The cultural, rather  than the personal being, is the focus. I have found that therapy under the  particularist perspective tends to lean heavily towards the psychoeducational;  for example, Bass and Coleman, when conducting a school-based intervention for under-achieving African-American students, focused primarily on teaching  cultural history to the participants, and discussing how this cultural history  affects their lives. ♦  Perspective #3 - Transcendentalist Perspective In addition to the universalist and particularist  perspectives, the third perspective is the transcendentalist  perspective. As you have probably experienced, the transcendentalist  assumption is that both therapist and client have extensive cultural  experiences that influence their behavior and worldviews, and that it is the  individual who must has to interpret these experiences. Although there are normative assumptions that can be made based on cultural factors, it is just as  essential to understand how these assumptions become real through choices made  by individual members of a group.
 For example, in the case of eating disorders,  it is important to the transcendentalist to understand not only how cultural  factors influence body image, but the nature of family relationships, and the  individual’s innate need for control.   Focus of treatment, logically, is to include the client’s interpretation  of these elements as well as psychoeducational exercises on the role contextual  factors have in the disorder. Isaiah (I-za’-ah), 13, was an  African-American client treated by David, one of my supervisees. Isaiah had  been placed in foster care following reports of his sexually inappropriate  behavior towards his nine year old sister. There were also indications that Isaiah  had been sexually abused himself, and he had been removed from his home  primarily because his mother would not comply with treatment recommendations.  Alice, Isaiah’s mother, had been openly hostile towards the therapists and  case-workers who worked with Isaiah.  Alice  had stated, "I don’t know why you’re always calling me in when Isaiah has  problems at school and other places where I have no control over him." Since  Isaiah’s removal from the home, Alice  had been insisting he be brought home where she could care for him.  Isaiah exhibited oppositional-defiant  behavior, and responded to feeling threatened by verbally attacking the  perceived offender.  When challenged, Isaiah’s behavior would escalate,  requiring him to be removed from the room. David told me that he had observed Isaiah  using the race of the ‘offender’ as a reason they would want to hurt him. Isaiah  clearly had no background of positive relationships with peers or adults of any  race. ♦  Comparing the Three Perspectives 
 --a. Universalist:  I found that Isaiah’s case presented challenges that helped David  develop an approach to multicultural counseling. From a universalist  perspective, the case would require addressing Isaiah’s issues from a coherent intrapsychic perspective.
 --b. Particularist: The particularist perspective, in which the primary factor in a  client’s worldview and sense of self is largely the result of a particular  cultural factor, such as ethnicity or gender, would require specialized intervention for  each of Isaiah’s difficulties, for example, sexual predation, cultural  identity, and oppositional-defiance.   --c.  Transcendentalist: From the transcendentalist perspective,  however, the therapist would make use of an integrated system of care which  could address Isaiah’s difficulties both from an intrapsychic perspective and a  contextual one.  David decided to work from the transcendentalist perspective,  and developing a treatment program involved assessing the relative importance  of each of Isaiah’s difficulties, as well as the importance on focusing on  cultural identity development, family dynamics, and school behavior. We also  discussed who could provide the most effective care for Isaiah based on race  and gender.  After assessing these items, David constructed a treatment program  with my assistance that involved individual therapy for the oppositional  defiant behavior, and a psycho-educational group experience that dealt with the  development of African-American cultural identity. Clearly, had Isaiah been David's first African-American  client, he may have had much more difficulty approaching his case. As you have  probably experienced, the best way for supervisees to develop a constructive  multi-cultural perspective is to ensure that they have exposure to clients of a  wide array of cultural and ethnic backgrounds. In my experience, this varied  exposure allows supervisees to develop the ability to discriminate the relative  effects of cultural and intrapsychic elements on the development of a disorder,  the construction of a treatment program, and evaluation of the client’s  behavior within the treatment. In this section, we have discussed three common perspectives  in multi-cultural counseling. We also discussed techniques by which to  encourage the growth of multicultural counseling skills within supervisees. In the next section, teaching self-appraisal to clinical  supervisees. We will also discuss the six point supervisee self-assessment that  I use regarding working and evaluating skills. The five points in this  assessment are action steps, focusing, reframing, confronting, and pointing out  endings.Reviewed 2023
 
 Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References:
 Chao, R. C.-L., Wei, M., Good, G. E., & Flores, L. Y. (2011). Race/ethnicity,     color-blind racial attitudes, and multicultural counseling   competence:   The moderating effects of multicultural counseling   training. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 58(1), 72–82.
 
 Gundel, B. E., Bartholomew, T. T., & Scheel, M. J. (2020). Culture and care: An illustration of multicultural processes in a counseling dyad. Practice Innovations, 5(1), 19–31.
 
 Koch, J. M., Procopio, S. J., Knutson, D., Loche, R. W. III, Jayne, A., Jayne, C., & Loche, L. (2018). Counseling psychology students’ perceptions of faculty multicultural competence. Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Psychology, 4(3), 140–150.
 
 Sehgal, R., Saules, K., Young, A., Grey, M. J., Gillem, A. R., Nabors, N. A., Byrd, M. R., & Jefferson, S. (2011). Practicing     what we know: Multicultural counseling competence among clinical     psychology trainees and experienced multicultural psychologists. Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology, 17(1), 1–10.
 
 Wilcox, M. M., Drinane, J. M., Black, S. W., Cabrera, L., DeBlaere, C., Tao, K. W., Hook, J. N., Davis, D. E., Watkins, C. E., & Owen, J. (2021). Layered cultural processes: The relationship between multicultural orientation and satisfaction with supervision. Training and Education in Professional Psychology.
 
 Worthington, R. L., & Dillon, F. R. (2011). Deconstructing multicultural counseling competencies research: Comment on Owen, Leach, Wampold, and Rodolfa (2011). Journal of Counseling Psychology, 58(1), 10–15.
 QUESTION 5What are the three common perspectives in multicultural counseling? To select and enter your answer go to .
 
 
 
 
 
 
 |