Questions and Answers 2026/2027 | Verified Edition | LCSW
ASWB Prep | Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded
Section 1: Human Development, Diversity & Behavior in Environment (Questions
1-35)
Q1: A 10-year-old client is struggling with feelings of inferiority after failing a
standardized math test. According to Erikson's psychosocial stages of development,
which crisis is this client experiencing?
A. Trust vs. Mistrust
B. Industry vs. Inferiority
C. Initiative vs. Guilt
D. Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Erikson's fourth stage, Industry vs. Inferiority, occurs during the school-age
years (6 to 12 years) where children must learn to cope with social and academic
demands or risk feeling incompetent. Trust vs. Mistrust is infancy, Initiative vs. Guilt is
preschool, and Autonomy vs. Shame is toddlerhood.
Q2: A social worker is assessing a 15-year-old client who is able to think abstractly,
reason logically, and hypothesize about future scenarios. According to Piaget's theory of
cognitive development, which stage is this adolescent in?
A. Concrete operational stage
B. Preoperational stage
C. Formal operational stage
D. Sensorimotor stage
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Piaget's formal operational stage begins around age 12 and is characterized
by the ability to think abstractly, use deductive reasoning, and consider hypothetical
situations, unlike the concrete operational stage which is limited to logical reasoning
about concrete events.
Q3: During a biopsychosocial assessment, a mother reports that her 2-year-old child
avoids physical contact, does not seek comfort when distressed, and shows no
preference between the mother and a stranger. According to Ainsworth's attachment
theory, which attachment style does this child most likely display?
A. Secure attachment
B. Avoidant attachment
C. Ambivalent/resistant attachment
,D. Disorganized attachment
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Ainsworth's avoidant attachment style is characterized by a child who does
not seek proximity to the caregiver upon reunion after separation, appears independent,
and ignores the caregiver, often due to a caregiver who is rejecting or emotionally
unavailable.
Q4: A school social worker is consulting with a teacher about a student who is
struggling with a new math concept. The social worker suggests identifying what the
student can do with help and what they can do alone. This concept is best described by
Vygotsky's theory as the:
A. Schema
B. Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)
C. Moral development ladder
D. Epigenetic principle
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Vygotsky's Zone of Proximal Development refers to the gap between what a
learner can do independently and what they can achieve with guidance from a more
knowledgeable other, aligning with CSWE EPAS competency in applying theoretical
frameworks to practice.
Q5: A social worker is evaluating a client's environment by examining the interactions
between the client's family, their school system, and the local community resources.
According to Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory, which system is being
assessed?
A. Microsystem
B. Mesosystem
C. Exosystem
D. Macrosystem
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The mesosystem encompasses the interconnections and interactions among
the microsystems in a person's life (e.g., family-school interactions), distinguishing it
from a single microsystem, the exosystem (indirect external environments), or the
macrosystem (cultural values).
Q6: A social worker is using a psychodynamic framework to understand a 6-year-old
client who is highly competitive with their same-sex parent and exhibits guilt over hostile
thoughts toward them. Freud would classify this behavior as part of which psychosexual
stage?
A. Oral stage
B. Anal stage
,C. Phallic stage
D. Latency stage
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Freud's phallic stage (ages 3-6) involves the Oedipus or Electra complex,
where children experience unconscious sexual desires for the opposite-sex parent and
rivalry with the same-sex parent, leading to guilt and eventual identification with the
same-sex parent.
Q7: An adolescent client decides not to cheat on a test because they believe it is
against the school rules and they might get caught, risking punishment. According to
Kohlberg's theory of moral development, this reasoning falls under which stage?
A. Preconventional - Punishment and Obedience orientation
B. Conventional - Law and Order orientation
C. Conventional - Interpersonal Accord and Conformity
D. Postconventional - Social Contract orientation
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Kohlberg's conventional stage, specifically the Law and Order orientation, is
characterized by an emphasis on obeying rules, respecting authority, and maintaining
social order to avoid societal disruption, rather than just avoiding personal punishment
(Preconventional).
Q8: A client diagnosed with a terminal illness tells the social worker, "If I just pray harder
and donate more money to charity, God will cure me." According to Kübler-Ross, which
stage of grief is this client currently experiencing?
A. Denial
B. Anger
C. Bargaining
D. Depression
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Kübler-Ross identified bargaining as the stage where an individual attempts
to negotiate or make deals (often with a higher power) to postpone or reverse the loss,
distinguishing it from denial (refusing to believe) or anger (blaming others).
Q9: A social worker is reviewing the Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) study with
a community group. The study highlights that childhood trauma is linked to negative
health outcomes in adulthood. Which concept best explains this mechanism?
A. Reciprocal determinism
B. Cumulative risk
C. Epigenetics
D. Object permanence
Correct Answer: B
, Rationale: The ACEs study demonstrates cumulative risk, showing that as the number
of adverse childhood experiences increases, the risk for negative physical and mental
health outcomes in adulthood also increases cumulatively.
Q10: A family therapist is working with a family where the parents argue about
discipline, and the teenage son acts out, which causes the parents to argue more. The
therapist explains that it is difficult to find a single cause for the behavior because the
family members continually influence each other. This is an example of:
A. Linear causality
B. Circular causality
C. Triangulation
D. Homeostasis
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Family systems theory uses the concept of circular causality to explain how
family interactions are interconnected in feedback loops, where no single event is the
sole "cause" of another, contrasting with linear cause-and-effect thinking.
Q11: A social worker using a structural family therapy model observes that a mother is
overly enmeshed with her 12-year-old son, while the father is disconnected from the
family unit. The primary goal of the intervention will be to:
A. Explore the father's unconscious childhood trauma
B. Restructure the family boundaries to create a clear hierarchical structure
C. Provide psychoeducation on effective communication
D. Challenge the family's irrational cognitive distortions
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Structural family therapy, developed by Minuchin, focuses on reorganizing
the family structure by adjusting boundaries (e.g., disengaging the enmeshed
mother-son dyad and engaging the disengaged father) to establish a clear generational
hierarchy.
Q12: In a clinical assessment, a social worker asks a client to draw a diagram of their
family spanning three generations, including marriages, divorces, and medical histories.
What is this tool called?
A. Ecomap
B. Genogram
C. Sociogram
D. Culturagram
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: A genogram is a pictorial display of a person's family relationships and
medical history across multiple generations, used to identify intergenerational patterns,