Friday, February 24, 2012

Fourth Interview Questions

1.       What is the best way to support a survivor through their trauma?

2.       What is vicarious trauma?

3.       How often people working with sexual assault survivors get vicarious trauma?

4.       What is the best way to prevent it?

5.       Do you think that working with sexual assault survivors have changed your view about life?

6.       How can you make the survivor feel comfortable with you?

7.       What is the best way to gain the survivor’s trust?

8.       What are the most common reactions survivors have when talking to you?

9.       How do you think working with children is different from working with adults survivors?

10.   What are some unconscious ways advocates can transmit insecurity to the survivor?

11.   What are the most important things advocates don’t have to do when working with survivors?

12.   What do you think are some comments that survivors take too personal?

13.   Is it a good idea to ask the survivor what and how it happened?

14.   How does touch can affect the survivor?

15.   What do you when the survivors tell you that they don’t need your help?

16.   Who is more likely to cooperate the most children, teens or adults? Why?

17.   What is the best way to approach teenagers?

18.   What do you think is the most rewarding part of your job?

19.   What is the best way to approach a child?

20.   What would you say is the most difficult part to work with survivors?

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