This question falls under Domain I: Interpersonal Competencies, which emphasizes active listening and communication techniques such as paraphrasing to validate and clarify an individual’s statements. The CPRP Exam Blueprint specifies that paraphrasing involves “restating the individual’s message in the practitioner’s own words to confirm understanding and demonstrate empathy, focusing on the content and facts of the statement.” The scenario requires the practitioner to paraphrase the individual’s description of a work mistake and their supervisor’s reaction without adding interpretations or judgments.
Option A: This response restates the key facts of the individual’s statement (making an error at work and the supervisor seeming upset) in a concise, neutral manner. It accurately reflects the content without adding emotional assumptions or judgments, making it the best example of paraphrasing.
Option B: This response includes praise for the individual’s courage, which is an interpretation rather than a restatement, and does not fully capture the supervisor’s reaction, making it less accurate as paraphrasing.
Option C: This response assumes the individual is frustrated and disappointed the supervisor, which adds emotional interpretations not explicitly stated, diverging from pure paraphrasing.
Option D: This response also assumes frustration and minimizes the mistake’s significance, which introduces judgment and does not accurately restate the original statement.
Extract from CPRP Exam Blueprint (Domain I: Interpersonal Competencies):
“Tasks include: 2. Demonstrating active listening skills, including paraphrasing to confirm understanding of the individual’s message. 3. Using person-centered communication to validate individuals’ experiences.”
[References:, , Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association (PRA). (2014). CPRP Exam Blueprint. Retrieved from PRA Certification Handbook., PRA. (2024). CPRP Exam Preparation & Primer Online 2024 Course: Module 2 – Interpersonal Competencies., Rogers, C. R. (1951). Client-Centered Therapy. Houghton Mifflin (influential in PRA’s person-centered approach, emphasizes paraphrasing).]
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