Teaching skills in psychiatric rehabilitation follows a structured, evidence-based process to ensure effective learning. The CPRP Exam Blueprint (Domain V: Strategies for Facilitating Recovery) outlines skill teaching as a multi-step process that includes modeling, role-playing, and practice (Task V.B.4: "Teach skills using evidence-based methods"). The standard sequence is to first describe the skill, then model it (demonstrate how it is performed), followed by role-playing (where the individual practices in a simulated setting), and finally real-world practice. Option A (modeling the skill) aligns with this, as role-playing typically follows modeling to allow the individual to observe the skill in action before attempting it themselves in a controlled, supportive environment.
Option B (practicing the skill) refers to real-world application, which comes after role-playing. Option C (trying the skill for the first time) is vague but implies initial practice, which role-playing itself facilitates. Option D (describing how to do the skill) precedes modeling, as description alone is insufficient before demonstration. The PRA Study Guide, referencing skill-teaching models like the Boston University Psychiatric Rehabilitation approach, confirms that role-playing follows modeling, supporting Option A.
[:, CPRP Exam Blueprint (2014), Domain V: Strategies for Facilitating Recovery, Task V.B.4., PRA Study Guide (2024), Section on Skill Teaching Methods., CPRP Exam Preparation & Primer Online 2024, Module on Strategies for Facilitating Recovery., , ]
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