These sections, since they are all written by experts with personal as well as professional experience of a given minority group, are especially powerful, memorable, illustrative, and potentially extremely useful within actual future clinical settings.
The first chapter also points out that although "minorities" are frequently regarded, especially by European-descended Caucasian-Americans (still the large majority of counselors in America today), as somehow one large amalgamated block, of people "different from ourselves," the four minority groups discussed within the book are extremely distinct from one another: in values; beliefs; assumptions; attitudes; historical backgrounds, encounters with particular kinds of prejudices, and real life experiences. Moreover, vast differences, far more so than generally recognized, exist within subgroups of each of the four major minority groups discussed.
Atkinson further reminds readers, also, that the concept of counseling, in and of itself, is one with which many minority group members, for diverse and often unrecognized and unappreciated (by counselors) reasons, will often be experienced as inherently uncomfortable for the minority group member. For example, since for most Native Americans, emphasis is typically placed much more on the extended family group or tribe as a whole, than it is on the individual, it would not be unusual for a Native American client to feel uncomfortable discussing himself or herself separately from the group to which he or she belongs.
Native Americans also typically have a much different concept of family, and the importance of lifelong family connections and interactions, than do Caucasians. According to Atkinson et al., for example, while a typical first question for a counselor to ask a Caucasian client might be something like "Can you tell me about yourself and what brings you here?" A more appropriate question to ask a Native American first time client would be "Can you tell me about your people and your family?"
Since minority group members, in general, experience day-to-day life in America far differently than Caucasians typically do, they will, consequently, present far different issues to counselors. Garrett points out, in...
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