Option A – Using techniques without prior trainingEthical standards require counselors to practice within the boundaries of their competence, which is based on education, training, supervised experience, and appropriate professional experience. Using counseling techniques for which the counselor has no prior training or competence violates these standards and may place clients at risk. This breaches ethical practice.
Option B – Imposing personal valuesCounselors are expected to avoid imposing their own values, attitudes, beliefs, or behaviors on clients, especially when such imposition may interfere with the counseling process or clients’ autonomy. Ethically, counselors must respect the dignity and autonomy of clients and support their ability to make their own decisions. Imposing the counselor’s personal values is clearly unethical.
Option C – Charging higher fees than others in the areaEthical codes state that counselors must establish fees that are consistent with accepted professional practices, explain fees and billing to clients in advance, and avoid exploitation of clients. However, it is not an ethical requirement that a counselor’s fees match or be similar to other providers’ fees in the area.A counselor may charge higher fees if:
The fees are clearly disclosed to the client beforehand,
The client agrees voluntarily, and
The fee structure is not exploitative or fraudulent.Therefore, simply charging higher fees than others does not, by itself, constitute an ethical violation, making C the correct answer.
Option D – Disclosing notes and records without permissionEthical standards emphasize confidentiality as a core duty. Counselors must not disclose client information, counseling notes, or records without the client’s informed consent, except under specific legal or ethical exceptions (e.g., risk of harm, court order, etc.). Disclosing records without permission generally breaches confidentiality and ethical practice.
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