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Milling, Len; Kirsch, Irving – 1983
Current theoretical approaches to understanding emotional difficulties are dominated by the medical model of mental illness, which assumes that emotional dysfunction can be viewed the same way as physical dysfunction. To examine the relationship between psychotherapy clients' beliefs about the medical model of psychotherapy and their behavior…
Descriptors: College Students, Expectation, Higher Education, Mental Health
Tillinghast, Margo Amy; VandeCreek, Leon – 1985
Confidentiality in psychotherapy has long been assumed. Recently, this confidentiality has been threatened by computer filing systems, the courts, and third party payers of client expenses. This study investigates client expectations of confidentiality and information subject to disclosure. Subjects (N=185) were undergraduate students who…
Descriptors: College Students, Confidentiality, Counselor Client Relationship, Counselor Role
Bukacek, Susan E. – 1980
Generalized expectancies for problem solving referred to by Rotter appear to have significant relevance to the field of psychotherapy, particularly four specific expectancies of interest: (1) looking for alternatives; (2) understanding the motives of others; (3) long-term planning; and (4) discriminating differences in psychological situations. A…
Descriptors: Adults, Behavior Change, Discriminant Analysis, Expectation
Kunkel, Mark A.; And Others – 1989
Although expectations about counseling and psychotherapy have much potential influence on the tendency of elderly persons to seek counseling and on their response to the counseling encounter, there is little research available to assist those providing psychological services to this population. Expectations about counseling among the elderly were…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Client Characteristics (Human Services), Comparative Analysis, Counseling Services
Kunkel, Mark A.; Plescia, Joanne – 1989
Knowledge about client expectations of counseling is important in its contribution to theory and practice, particularly for those ethnic and cultural populations presently underserved. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship among acculturation and expectations about counseling in a majority (non-Hispanic) and minority…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Client Characteristics (Human Services), Counseling, Cross Cultural Studies
Sheehy, Nancy; Meiselman, Karin C. – 1981
Incest is an issue that generates strong emotional reactions in psychotherapists as well as laypeople. Clinicians may not be immune to the tendancy to overreact by predicting poor outcomes for incest victims or by denying its importance altogether. To assess the effect of incest on the evaluations of female clients by therapists, 124 clinicians…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Background, Counseling Effectiveness, Counselor Attitudes
Jenkins, Yvonne M. – 1982
Despite tremendous strides in educational and professional development, the black professional woman who seeks psychotherapy is often entrapped by a world view based on a very dissonant set of expectations. This world view is based on the belief that possibilities for acceptance on the basis of one's professional characteristics surpass…
Descriptors: Black Achievement, Black Stereotypes, Blacks, Counselor Client Relationship