Ch15 Complete Test Bank The Path Ahead Personal and Social - Last Dance 11e Answer Key and Test Bank by Lynne Ann DeSpelder. DOCX document preview.

Ch15 Complete Test Bank The Path Ahead Personal and Social

The Last Dance: Encountering Death & Dying, 11e (DeSpelder)

Chapter 15 The Path Ahead: Personal and Social Choices

1) "The desire for immortality has its own pitfalls" is a message communicated in a

A) Chinese folktale.

B) Irish legend.

C) Native American proverb.

D) Shamanic tale.

2) The message communicated in the Chinese folk tale, The Mortal King, is that

A) life is too short.

B) life is too long.

C) the desire for immortality has pitfalls.

D) the desire for immortality is a worthy but unattainable goal.

3) According to Thomas Attig, coming to terms with our finiteness and mortality can be understood as a

A) psychodynamic process.

B) grieving process.

C) mechanism of change.

D) defensive mechanism.

4) Which of the following advantages are gained by studying death and dying?

1. It can focus attention on the importance of taking care of unfinished business.

2. It helps individuals dissipate feelings of guilt or blame about a loved one's death.

3. It helps individuals avoid the severe pain of grief.

4. It allows opportunities to explore unexpressed and unresolved grief.

A) 1, 2, and 3

B) 1, 2, and 4

C) 1, 3, and 4

D) 2, 3, and 4

5) The study of death and dying

A) limits opportunities to explore unexpressed and unresolved grief.

B) brings insights causing intense feelings of guilt about a loved one's death.

C) can be academically intriguing.

D) increases death anxiety and restricts us from coming to terms with our own mortality.

6) Some of the "lessons taught" in death studies are still based on

A) a culturally diverse population.

B) middle-class white population.

C) homeless volunteers and inner-city youth.

D) senior citizens.

7) Which of the following groups is underrepresented in resource materials commonly used in death education courses?

A) Children

B) Ethnic groups and minorities

C) Homeless people

D) Middle class people

8) Heritage is best understood by exploring cultural associations, social class, and

A) spirituality.

B) skin color.

C) communities.

D) religion.

9) The process by which individuals and systems respond respectfully and effectively to people of all cultures, languages, backgrounds, and other diversity factors in a manner that recognizes, affirms, and values the worth of others and protects and preserves the dignity of each is cultural

A) accommodation.

B) complexity.

C) sensitivity.

D) competence.

10) Although death is fundamentally a ________ fact, socially shaped ideas and assumptions create its meaning.

A) religious

B) biological

C) cultural

D) mystical

11) Fritz Roth's suitcase exhibit was essentially about

A) trips to the otherworld.

B) children packing for an end of life journey.

C) personal mortality.

D) preserving linking objects.

12) According to Dolores Dooley, the Republic of Ireland has been engaged in

A) a national debate about the use of 'grief clinics.'

B) a national conversation about death and the process of dying.

C) ongoing tension regarding Catholic funeral rites and rituals.

D) legalizing medical marijuana.

13) In Italy, Francesco Campione began an organization, Projecto Rivivere, that uses the Internet to

A) help children with death and bereavement.

B) sell funeral goods and services.

C) provide holistic approaches to end-of-life care.

D) promote membership.

14) Although Australia is familiar with natural disasters, what event occurred to initiate the formalizing of death education and coordinated services?

A) Fritz Roth's last journey exhibit

B) 1977 Granville train disaster

C) 1980 tsunami in the outer islands

D) death of Mal Cooperin after the opening of the Australian Care Centre

15) In which country was an Association for Death Education and Grief Counseling founded by Alfons Deeken, a Jesuit priest and philosopher?

A) Japan

B) Fiji

C) Germany

D) Italy

16) In an analysis of 1500 articles of academic journals over the last 20 years, it was noted that, in terms of methodology there is an increase in qualitative or

A) practice based research.

B) content based research.

C) narrative based research.

D) historical based research.

17) The acronym ADEC is?

A) Association for Death Education and Counseling

B) Aiding Death Educators and Counselors

C) Advancing Death Education and Counseling

D) Association of Death Education and Credentialing

18) "Compassionate cities," a term coined by Allan Kellehear, denotes a model of public health that encourages

A) community participation in end-of-life care.

B) care limited to hospice and palliative care.

C) federal government involvement in funeral practices and aftercare.

D) death education geared towards professionals.

19) What is an innovative public health program that recognizes the need for community involvement, commitment, and consideration of death as a fact of life?

A) Golden Acres

B) The Path Ahead

C) City of Positive Journeys

D) Compassionate Cities

20) Which of the following are defining characteristics of a "compassionate city"?

1. A strong commitment to social and cultural differences

2. Offers inhabitants a close circle of secure support without interference from outsiders

3. Meets special needs of the aged, those living with life threatening illness, and those living with loss

4. Preserves and promotes spiritual traditions and storytellers

A) 1, 2, and 3

B) 1, 2, and 4

C) 1, 3, and 4

D) 2, 3, and 4

21) Herman Feifel is quoted as saying that the death awareness movement has

A) little effect in broadening our grasp of the phenomenology of illness.

B) little to say about the vitality if human responses to loss.

C) desensitized us to our common humanity, which is all too eroded in the present world.

D) helped humanize medical relationships and health care.

22) In commenting on the messages of care for the dying promoted by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, Dame Cicely Saunders, and Mother Teresa of Calcutta, Robert Fulton and Greg Owen remark that this message is also about

A) correcting financial and economic imbalances that affect people throughout the world.

B) expanding medical services to large numbers of people who are in populations that are underserved.

C) essential religious and spiritual values that extend beyond the immediate goal of care for the dying.

D) focusing on care of the bereaved and initiating more humane ways of providing funeral services.

23) In considering the personal value derived from thinking about and exploring the meaning of death, one engages both mental faculties and

A) customs.

B) understanding.

C) emotions.

D) abilities.

24) There are signs that the circumstances surrounding death are being brought back into the personal control of the

A) physicians and families.

B) individuals and families.

C) families and close friends.

D) religious and spiritual leaders.

25) What is a potential downside of humanizing death and dying?

A) Circumstances surrounding death are brought into the personal domain of the individuals and families who are closest to a particular death.

B) Traditional customs and practices are being revived in new ways.

C) It may minimize and devalue death.

D) Death is not seen as a foe to be vanquished or fought to the bitter end.

26) In considering various ways of defining a "good death," which of the following statements about ancient Greece is true?

A) Dying at a young age was considered a misfortune, whereas in our society we want to "live hard and die young."

B) Dying at a young age was considered exceptional luck, whereas in our society it is considered a misfortune.

C) People did not treasure their young the way we do.

D) People believed that when a person died young they were in a properly sanctified state and this resulted in a good death.

27) In ancient Greece, it was considered exceptional luck to die

A) in battle or as a martyr.

B) at an old age with a large family.

C) young, in the fullness of one's creative energies.

D) during a self-chosen time of solitude.

28) According to Robert Kastenbaum, which of the following constitutes the good death?

1. It affirms significant personal relationships.

2. It is transfiguring and enacts the highest values.

3. It finally ends the long, contemplative journey.

4. It is coherent and the final phase of a good life.

A) 1, 2, and 3

B) 2, 3, and 4

C) 1, 2, and 4

D) 1, 3, and 4

29) One component of a "good death" is the affirmation of the whole person. This involves

A) empowering the dying person by striving for clear communication.

B) the entire family being present at the time of death if they choose.

C) seeing the dying person not as a disease but in the context of his or her life.

D) publication of a comprehensive obituary or life-review.

30) An alternative way of defining a good death has been offered by Stu Farber and his colleagues. They propose the term ________ death and define it as a nonjudgmental relationship emphasizing the mutuality of caregivers and patients.

A) transfiguring

B) compassionate

C) respectful

D) interpersonal

31) Which of the following are included in the concept of an appropriate death?

1. Minimal pain and suffering

2. Respecting one's preferences

3. Resolving conflicts

4. Long productive life

A) 1, 2, and 3

B) 1, 2, and 4

C) 1, 3, and 4

D) 2, 3, and 4

32) According to Avery Weisman, what is the first step required in order to achieve an appropriate death?

A) Rid ourselves of the notion that death is appropriate.

B) Rid ourselves of the notion that death is never appropriate.

C) Determine what we need to do to have an appropriate death.

D) Determine how to define an appropriate death.

33) Natural, expected, honorable, and rueful are among the "criteria for a good death" suggested by

A) Robert Kastenbaum.

B) Edwin Shneidman.

C) Stu Farber.

D) William Wendt.

34) Edwin Shneidman suggests that the good death focuses not just on the person's dying, but also on the

A) final phase of life.

B) person's post-self.

C) significant personal relationships.

D) completion of life's tasks.

35) What is the term used for individuals who live beyond 100 years?

A) Centurians

B) Optigenarians

C) Centenarians

D) Crestenarians

36) In contemplating death in the future, which of the following is likely to demand the greatest attention from individuals and societies?

A) Older population

B) Increase in birthrate

C) Reduction in time for funerals

D) Younger population

37) In Japan, high-rise cemeteries exist because

A) people prefer to be entombed close to the heavens and God.

B) burial space is subject to strict zoning laws.

C) 21st century people prefer modern burial accommodations.

D) burial space is at a premium.

38) Which of the following is an example of a specialized support and advocacy group?

A) The Mortal Kings

B) Sibs in Sync

C) Parents of Murdered Children

D) Will-Lee's Dream

39) The premise of Kit Reed's story, Golden Acres, is that

A) people should enjoy relaxed, leisurely lives in their old age.

B) elderly people prefer to live in rural, rather than urban, environments.

C) elderly people occupy a large proportion of the population and overcrowding may lead to life-or-death decisions.

D) people should be allowed to die a natural death in familiar surroundings when they reach the end of their lifespan.

40) Poet Gary Snyder has called attention to the loss of a

A) parent.

B) culture.

C) species.

D) history.

41) Many people who complete a course in death and dying find that

A) their anxieties about death have not changed.

B) they are now prepared to confront grief and put it behind them.

C) their explorations have consequences for living that had not been foreseen when they first signed up for the course.

D) they are interested in a career in thanatology.

42) Death awareness creates an added dimension to living by bringing us into the present and serving as a reminder of

A) things left undone.

B) the importance of family.

C) the precious precariousness of life.

D) our past heritage.

43) Death education can result in insights that help dissipate or resolve long-held feelings of guilt.

44) Language reveals a great deal about personal and cultural attitudes towards death.

45) As the momentum increased to find ways to better bridge the gap between research and practice in the early 2000s, the situation still has not improved much today.

46) The goal of a "compassionate city" is essentially concerned with hospice and palliative care.

47) Care of the dying as normal and routine and an emphasis on the importance of community relationships both relate to the ideal of creating compassionate cities.

48) Edwin Shneidman was a respected thanatologist and suicidologist.

49) After Charles Lindbergh's lymphoma diagnosis, he viewed his life as "an ill-timed disease" and strongly considered physician-assisted suicide.

50) Kastenbaum says that the good death is simply the final phase of good living, good aging, good care, and not-so-good luck.

51) During the next two decades, the number of persons age 65 and over in the United States is expected to finally decrease.

52) The trend of ceremonies moving from day to night and weekday to weekend is an alteration that has developed in the funeral industry as a result of social change.

53) The Internet has not had any significant effect on the availability of death, dying, and bereavement resources.

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Document Type:
DOCX
Chapter Number:
15
Created Date:
Aug 21, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 15 The Path Ahead Personal and Social Choices
Author:
Lynne Ann DeSpelder

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