Cognitive Therapy & Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) (College Board AP® Psychology): Study Guide

Raj Bonsor

Written by: Raj Bonsor

Reviewed by: Claire Neeson

Updated on

Focus & techniques of cognitive therapy

  • Cognitive therapy, developed by Aaron Beck, proposes that psychological disorders arise not from external events but from the way people think about those events

    • The goal of cognitive therapy is to identify and modify maladaptive thinking

    • Beck argued that clients develop negative schemas that lead to cognitive distortions

  • Cognitive therapy focuses on the cognitive triad, which is Beck's model of depression in which negative automatic thoughts cluster around three themes:

    • Negative view of self

      • "I am worthless, inadequate, or a failure"

    • Negative view of the world

      • "The world places insurmountable obstacles in my path"

    • Negative view of the future

      • "Things will never improve; there is no hope"

Maladaptive schemas & cognitive distortions

  • Maladaptive schemas are deeply held, negative patterns of thinking that develop through experience and lead to distorted interpretations of events

  • Common types of cognitive distortion include:

    • arbitrary inference: drawing conclusions without evidence

      • E.g. a person who receives no reply to a message and thinks "They must hate me" despite there being no evidence

    • all-or-nothing thinking: seeing things in extremes only

      • E.g. a person who thinks "If I don't get this job, I'll be a complete failure"

    • overgeneralization: applying one negative event to all situations

      • E.g. a person who fails one job interview and concludes "I will never get any job"

Cognitive restructuring

  • Cognitive restructuring is the core technique of cognitive therapy, in which the therapist helps the client:

    • identify, challenge, and replace maladaptive thoughts

  • The therapist challenges irrational or distorted thoughts by asking the client to examine the evidence for and against them

    • The client is encouraged to develop more balanced, realistic interpretations of events in place of distorted ones

      • E.g. a client who fails an exam and thinks "I am stupid and will always fail everything" is helped to recognize more balanced explanations, such as "I did not prepare enough for this particular exam and can do better next time"

  • Cognitive therapy also uses fear hierarchies to address anxiety

    • The therapist helps the client work through feared thoughts or situations in a graded way while challenging the accompanying distorted beliefs

Examiner Tips and Tricks

  • For Skill 4.B, when asked to support, refute, or modify a claim about cognitive therapy, consider the following:

    • Cognitive therapy has a strong evidence base, particularly for depression and anxiety disorders

    • Thought patterns can be tracked and changes quantified, making outcomes measurable and easy to evaluate scientifically

    • Cognitive therapy focuses on current cognitions and may not address the underlying causes of those thought patterns

    • Critics argue that maladaptive schemas may be rooted in earlier experience. By treating the thought rather than its origin, cognitive therapy may not produce lasting change for all clients

Focus & techniques of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)

  • CBT combines techniques from both cognitive and behavioral traditions to treat mental and behavioral disorders

    • CBT proposes that thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are interconnected

      • Changing one element produces changes in the others

  • The therapist works with the client on:

    • the cognitions (thoughts and beliefs) that maintain distress

    • the behaviors (avoidance, compulsions, social withdrawal) that reinforce the distress

  • CBT is typically short-term (8–20 sessions), structured, and goal-oriented

  • Clients are often given homework assignments to practice skills between sessions

Rational emotive behavior therapy (REBT)

  • REBT is based on the idea that when people encounter situations, they recite irrational statements to themselves that generate maladaptive emotional and behavioral responses

    • E.g. a person with social anxiety might think "Other people's opinions are crucial to my happiness" or "I always have to be perfect in everything I do"

  • The therapist confronts these irrational beliefs directly, explaining why they are incorrect and helping the client replace them with more rational, flexible alternatives

    • Unlike standard CBT, the client is not guided to discover the irrationality themselves; the therapist states it explicitly

Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT)

  • DBT combines standard CBT techniques with distress tolerance and emotional regulation strategies

    • Unlike standard CBT, DBT focuses on emotions and interpersonal relationships rather than thought patterns alone

    • DBT is built around dialectical tension

      • This is where the therapist helps the client accept two opposing truths simultaneously: "I am doing the best I can" and "I need to do better"

Feature

Standard CBT

REBT

DBT

Developed by

Aaron Beck

Albert Ellis

Marsha Linehan

Primary focus

Identifying and changing maladaptive thoughts and behaviors

Directly confronting and replacing irrational beliefs

Emotional regulation, distress tolerance, and acceptance

Approach

Collaborative; client guided to discover distortions

More directive; therapist challenges irrationality

Combines acceptance and change strategies

Originally developed for

Depression, anxiety

General emotional/behavioral problems

Borderline personality disorder; suicidal clients

Examiner Tips and Tricks

  • For Skill 1.A, be able to distinguish between CBT approaches in scenario questions

    • If the therapist directly tells the client their beliefs are irrational and incorrect = REBT

    • If the therapist focuses on distress tolerance and emotional regulation for a client with extreme emotional reactions = DBT

    • If the therapist collaboratively guides the client to identify and challenge their own distorted thinking = standard CBT

  • For Skill 4.B, when asked to support, refute, or modify a claim about CBT, consider the following:

    • CBT has the strongest evidence base of any psychological therapy across a wide range of disorders

    • Outcomes are measurable, treatment is relatively short-term, and techniques can be adapted across many different disorders

    • CBT focuses on current thought patterns and gives limited attention to the role of past experiences in shaping them

    • CBT is less effective for clients who struggle with introspection or find it difficult to identify and articulate their own thought patterns

Group therapy

  • Group therapy involves clients meeting together with a therapist in an interactive group, rather than in a one-to-one session

    • Group therapy can incorporate any of the therapeutic orientations covered in this unit, i.e. psychodynamic, humanistic, or may be eclectic in approach

  • A therapist facilitates the group but the group dynamics themselves are considered part of the therapeutic process

How group therapy differs from individual therapy

  • Cost and accessibility: group therapy is less expensive than individual therapy and allows a therapist to treat more clients simultaneously

    • This makes mental health treatment more accessible

  • Social learning and peer support: group members benefit from hearing the experiences and coping strategies of peers, not just from the therapist's input

    • Hearing that others have found ways to cope can normalize the client's own experience and provide practical strategies

  • Universality: clients realize they are not alone in their struggles

    • This can reduce shame and isolation, which is a benefit unique to group settings

  • Interpersonal learning: the group setting provides a live context for practicing social and interpersonal skills

    • Individual therapy cannot replicate this

  • However, there are limitations as:

    • clients may be less willing to disclose sensitive material in a group setting

    • individual needs may receive less attention than in one-to-one therapy

Types of group therapy

  • Family therapy is a form of group therapy in which the therapist works with the couple or family unit rather than the individual

    • Family therapy recognizes that a client's problems rarely occur in isolation

      • patterns of interaction among family members often maintain or exacerbate individual difficulties

    • The goal is to alter the behavior of the whole family system rather than just the identified individual

    • Family members are encouraged to:

      • express feelings to one another and to the therapist

      • listen to one another in ways that may not occur in other settings

  • Twelve-step programs (e.g., Alcoholics Anonymous) are a widely used form of group therapy

    • They are modeled on a combination of spirituality and group support

  • Twelve-step groups are typically not facilitated by professional psychotherapists

    • Instead, peers who have experienced the same difficulties share their experience and strength with each other

    • These groups have gained popularity in the treatment of substance use disorders

  • Peer support groups involve people sharing experience and mutual support around a particular condition or life challenge, without a professional therapist present

Examiner Tips and Tricks

  • For Skill 4.B, when asked to support, refute, or modify a claim about group therapy, consider the following:

    • More cost-effective than individual therapy and increases accessibility to mental health treatment

    • Peer support and universality are unique benefits that individual therapy cannot replicate

    • Clients may receive less individual attention than in one-to-one therapy

    • Clients may be reluctant to disclose sensitive material in front of others

    • Dominant group members may shape sessions in ways that do not benefit all participants equally

Unlock more, it's free!

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Raj Bonsor

Author: Raj Bonsor

Expertise: Psychology & Sociology Content Creator

Raj joined Save My Exams in 2024 as a Senior Content Creator for Psychology & Sociology. Prior to this, she spent fifteen years in the classroom, teaching hundreds of GCSE and A Level students. She has experience as Subject Leader for Psychology and Sociology, and her favourite topics to teach are research methods (especially inferential statistics!) and attachment. She has also successfully taught a number of Level 3 subjects, including criminology, health & social care, and citizenship.

Claire Neeson

Reviewer: Claire Neeson

Expertise: Psychology Content Creator

Claire has been teaching for 34 years, in the UK and overseas. She has taught GCSE, A-level and IB Psychology which has been a lot of fun and extremely exhausting! Claire is now a freelance Psychology teacher and content creator, producing textbooks, revision notes and (hopefully) exciting and interactive teaching materials for use in the classroom and for exam prep. Her passion (apart from Psychology of course) is roller skating and when she is not working (or watching 'Coronation Street') she can be found busting some impressive moves on her local roller rink.