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James P. Sampson Jr. Ed.; Janet G. Lenz Ed.; Emily Bullock-Yowell Ed.; Debra S. Osborn Ed.; Seth C. W. Hayden Ed. – Online Submission, 2023
This book's aim is to improve the integration of Cognitive Information Processing (CIP) theory, research, and practice, leading to more cost-effective career interventions that help persons to make informed and careful career decisions over a lifetime. The starting point for the book's content was the 2004 Sampson, Reardon, Peterson, and Lenz…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Information Processing, Career Development, Career Choice
Field, Thomas A., Ed.; Jones, Laura K., Ed.; Russell-Chapin, Lori A. – American Counseling Association, 2017
This text presents current, accessible information on enhancing the counseling process using a brain-based paradigm. Leading experts provide guidelines and insights for becoming a skillful neuroscience-informed counselor, making direct connections between the material covered and clinical practice. In this much-needed resource-the first to address…
Descriptors: Counseling, Brain, Counseling Techniques, Anatomy
Young, Mark E.; Hutchinson, Tracy S. – Journal of Humanistic Counseling, 2012
Although gratitude has been rediscovered by the field of positive psychology, strength-based wellness-oriented interventions have historically been a part of the humanistic tradition in counseling. The article is a review of emerging gratitude research including characteristics of gratitude, theoretical explanations, specific interventions, and…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Humanism, Intervention, Mental Health
Hanchon, Timothy A.; Fernald, Lori N. – Psychology in the Schools, 2013
Although school psychologists have been called on in recent literature to assume a leadership role in a collective and comprehensive effort to address students' mental health needs, many practitioners find that their professional roles continue to be narrowly focused on special education-related activities, such as individualized assessment…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, School Counseling, Child Health, Mental Health
Harper, Ruth; Wilson, Nona L. – NASPA - Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education, 2010
Helping skills are an essential component of today's student affairs practice. On a day-to-day basis, it is student affairs professionals who often work directly with students in need of mental health support and monitoring. "More Than Listening: A Casebook for Using Counseling Skills in Student Affairs Work" is written for those student affairs…
Descriptors: Counseling, Student Personnel Services, Mental Health, Student Development
Grey, Earl – Journal of Creativity in Mental Health, 2010
A large body of research has indicated that rational emotive behavioral therapy (REBT) is highly effective for treating many chief complaints. Because of the neurological and developmental limitations of young children, a counselor is required to use concrete and stimulating ways to treat young children. By incorporating art, color, and texture to…
Descriptors: Children, Psychotherapy, Neuropsychology, Mental Health
Bowman, Sharon L.; Roysircar, Gargi – Counseling Psychologist, 2011
Trauma-related assistance in response to disasters or catastrophes is needed locally, regionally, nationally, and internationally, and the authors argue that there is a necessity for counseling psychologists and counseling psychology programs to incorporate it into their prevention, training, and social justice repertoire. Counseling psychologists…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Counseling Psychology, Counseling Techniques, Counseling Theories
Gladding, Samuel T. – Journal of Creativity in Mental Health, 2008
Creativity is a crucial component in the advancement of all major cultural entities, including effective counseling. It is through creativity that major theories of counseling and skills in counseling have been developed. Creativity is longitudinal in its impact. If counseling is to progress in the future, it is essential that counselors be…
Descriptors: Creativity, Cultural Differences, Counseling Effectiveness, Counseling Techniques
Hansen, James T. – Journal of Humanistic Counseling, Education and Development, 2006
Counseling orientations are redescribed in terms of the relative importance they place on knowing. This epistemological redescription results in a reconsideration of the role of humanism. Specifically, rather than a treatment orientation, the author argues that humanism should be considered a moral imperative. Implications of this conclusion for…
Descriptors: Humanism, Morale, Helping Relationship, Altruism
Humanism as Ideological Rebellion: Deconstructing the Dualisms of Contemporary Mental Health Culture
Hansen, James T. – Journal of Humanistic Counseling, Education and Development, 2006
Humanistic thought has been oppressed by the dominant forces of contemporary mental health culture. The author argues that the rebellious essence of humanism must be incited to counter these reductive ideologies that have monopolized our times. A critical appraisal of the philosophical dualisms that support the prevailing mechanistic vision of…
Descriptors: Ideology, Mental Health, Humanism, Counseling Psychology
Briggs, Michele Kielty; Shoffner, Marie F. – Counseling and Values, 2006
Overall spiritual wellness, as well as 4 individual components of spiritual wellness, has been theoretically and empirically linked with depression. Prior to this investigation, no study has examined the relationship between spiritual wellness and depression by using a 4-component measurement model of spiritual wellness. In this study of older…
Descriptors: Late Adolescents, Wellness, Depression (Psychology), Counseling Theories