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, 2 PYC2614 May/June 2020 exam
Question 1
The aim of the module "Community Psychology: Building Foundations" (PYC2614) is to …
(1) train students as fully fledged professionals that can perform and implement community
interventions.
(2) build the foundations of communities.
(3) solve community problems in the areas of mental illness and crime, once and for all.
(4) provide ways and means of understanding current contextual issues in our communities.
(5) None of the above are correct.
Question 2
Mainstream modern psychology is NOT based on the belief that …
(1) knowledge should be produced through methods of science.
(2) objective truth can be discovered if methods of research are refined.
(3) objective knowledge can be created without considering the role of the observer or
researcher in the process of research.
(4) people are the (best) experts on their own lives and on their local communities.
(5) psychology should strive to be an objective and universal science.
Question 3
The traditional African psychological worldview does NOT …
(1) have a holistic view of life as a cosmic unity.
(2) view parental responsibilities as also residing with the extended family and community.
(3) make a clear distinction between nature and culture.
(4) gain knowledge primarily through separation and abstraction.
(5) view causality to be linked to the interaction of life forces.
Question 4
The critical African perspective on psychology …
(1) is based on the Western and individualistic approach to psychology.
(2) assumes a value-free orientation to knowledge that is located in the middle to upper
socio-economic classes.
(3) includes the lived experiences and reflections of marginalised people.
(4) caters only for the values of middle and upper classes.
(5) sees psychological illness as having an underlying biological cause.
Question 5
Yen’s (2013) discussion of the history of community psychology in South Africa points to the
position of liberatory community psychology wherein …
(1) psychological services and psychotherapy are only meant for the elite and middle class
who can afford it.
(2) “community” refers only to poor, disadvantaged, black townships or rural areas.
(3) community psychology is only for the disadvantaged who cannot afford or access
individual therapy.
(4) psychological health, illness and disorder are predominantly located within
individuals and not linked to societal, political, historic, and environmental influences.
(5) None of the above are correct.
, 3 PYC2614 May/June 2020 exam
Question 6
Which one of the following statements is NOT correct?
(1) There is no single definition of community psychology, and it is a heterogeneous concept.
(2) Nelson and Prilleltensky (2010) refer to community psychology as the critical study of
people in context.
(3) Community psychology is a neutral knowledge domain that is a sub-discipline of
Psychology.
(4) Community psychology places an emphasis on the importance of the local rather than the
universal.
(5) Community psychology is directed towards the common aim of improving community
conditions and promoting psychological wellbeing.
Question 7
The recent calls for a decolonised education by the “fallist” movements such as
“#Rhodesmustfall” and “#Feesmustfall” in South Africa can NOT be linked to …
(1) a critical process of self-reflection within student collectives and academia.
(2) a politics of knowledge production that show that science and knowledge is non-political.
(3) a process of critically thinking and theorising about the situatedness of knowledge
systems and entry into dialogues with different approaches or theories from elsewhere.
(4) a re-ignition of importance of an education that is relevant to the many and varied local
contexts in Southern Africa.
(5) the problematic of importing conceptual categories and theories from the West.
Question 8
Stevens (2013) speaks of “community psychologies” (heterogeneous) as opposed to a singular
“community psychology". This points to ...
(1) the relevant social contexts under which community psychologies operate.
(2) the intrapsychic and individualistic bio-medical model in psychology.
(3) modern Western values, ideals, principles, and practices.
(4) the liberal and humanitarian scientific ideologies and approaches to mental illness.
(5) the lived experiences of the people in the West.
Question 9
Stevens (2013) points to mental health reforms that were tied to the liberal and humanitarian
scientific approaches to mental health, social welfare and public policies. These are …
(1) the move towards treating mental illness as an individual problem.
(2) the introduction of an exclusive reliance on psychiatric medication.
(3) the “moral treatments” reform, the mental hygiene movement, and the de-
institutionalisation movement.
(4) the collapse of modernity and industrialisation.
(5) de-colonisation of indigenous peoples through the establishment of oceanic trade routes.
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