|  Healthcare Training Institute - Quality Education since 1979CE for Psychologist, Social Worker, Counselor, & MFT!!
 Course Learning Objectives/Outcomes
 By  the end of the course, the Counselor, Marriage and Family Therapist, Social Worker or Psychologist will be able to:
 -Discuss three interpersonal consequences of anger.
 -Describe four facets of anger.
 -Discuss four ways of communicating anger.
 -Describe six steps of anger management.
 -Discuss four strategies regarding changing perception to reduce anger.
 -Discuss four aspects of paths to blame.
 -Explain four techniques regarding mindfulness-based stress reduction.
 -Discuss four cognitive-behavioral therapy for stress.
 -Discuss six expressions of emotion in the face and body.
 -Describe two parts of mind reading experience.
 -Discuss three coping strategy using cognitive-behavioral therapy.
 -Explain three roles of apologies in anger reduction.
 -Discuss three contingent responses to anger.
 -Discuss three parts of cognitive perspective for understanding and training assertiveness.
 -Name three responses to anger-provoking situations that the Anger Evaluation Survey evaluates.
 -Name three factors made both groups of students and employees less likely to express anger.
 -Explain what people who try either to conceal their anger or externalize it by blaming others are at a higher risk for.
 -Explain under what conditions aggressive driving behavior occurs.
 -Name the six subscales of The Driving Anger Scale (DAS).
 -Explain what women learn about anger during gender role socializations.
 -Explain how anger diversions are not anger expression styles, but covert, emotional routes through which women try to escape what three factors.
 -Name the five suggestions  regarding Anger Management Programs.
 -Explain the rationale behind the claim that anger of hope (versus an anger of despair) is a functional anger.
 -Explain 'display rules'.
 -Explain surface acting and deep acting.
 -Name five common anger-inducing beliefs.
 
 
 "The instructional level of this course is introductory, intermediate, or advanced depending on the learners clinical area of expertise."
 
 
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