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Beuls, Katrien – Research-publishing.net, 2013
Construction Grammar (CxG) is a well-established linguistic theory that takes the notion of a construction as the basic unit of language. Yet, because the potential of this theory for language teaching or SLA has largely remained ignored, this paper demonstrates the benefits of adopting the CxG approach for modelling a student's linguistic…
Descriptors: Grammar, Counseling Theories, Second Language Instruction, Second Language Learning
Stockton, Rex – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2010
This article is based on the keynote address given by Dr. Stockton at the Association for Specialists in Group Work (ASGW) Luncheon at the ASGW Biennial Conference in New Orleans, LA, on February 19, 2010.
Descriptors: Group Counseling, Conference Papers, Teamwork, Specialists
Parker, Randall M. – Online Submission, 2007
This paper reviews current research concerning psychosocial adaptation to chronic illness and disability and presents recommendations for future development of theories in this area. First, those who craft or adapt theories must use nondisabling, respectful, and empowering language. Rehabilitation professionals must avoid terms that connote…
Descriptors: Chronic Illness, Rehabilitation Counseling, Counseling Techniques, Counseling Theories
McDonald, Craydon D. – 1992
Clinical assimilation of the various methods of family therapy, while maintaining an analytic, self-psychology perspective gave rise to Complementary Narcissism's novel system's perspective of the individual in context. While Complementary Narcissism Theory is applicable to all families, its interventions are most effective with those families who…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Family Counseling, Psychotherapy
Betts, Nicoletta C. – 1988
Richard Bandler and John Grinder developed neuro-linguisitc programming (NLP) after observing "the magical skills of potent psychotherapists" Frederick Perls, Virginia Satir, and Milton Erikson. They compiled the most effective techniques for building rapport, gathering data, and influencing change in psychotherapy, offering them only as…
Descriptors: Counseling Effectiveness, Counseling Theories, Psychotherapy
Clarken, Rodney, H. – 2003
Knowing, loving, and willing are identified as the basic capacities for developing human potential. These three faculties are briefly defined and several dynamic models to describe their inter-relationship and role in developing potential presented. These capacities and models are further explored in relation to the fourteen learner-centered…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Models, Psychological Characteristics
Nisenholz, Bernard – 1992
The world is in a period of rapid change. Trends in moving to a high technology information society, a world economy, more ethnic groups, an increasing economic gap between the rich and the poor, and more people living in poverty present enormous challenges and opportunities for the counseling profession. Counseling must broaden its focus from a…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Research Needs, Trend Analysis
Levis, Donald J. – 1990
The movement within behavior therapy to introduce cognitive terms, constructs, and techniques reflects and involves an extension of the pervasive cognitive movement within the experimental field and the long-standing cognitive approach of many clinicians. Modern day attacks on behaviorism by cognitivists have been almost exclusively geared to the…
Descriptors: Behaviorism, Cognitive Psychology, Counseling Theories, Trend Analysis
Savickas, Mark L. – 1990
Temporal experience structures how people conceptualize their careers and enact vocational behavior. Optimal career success and satisfaction follow from an experience of time characterized by an orientation to a future that is densely populated with events clearly connected to present behavior. Career interventions may empower individuals by…
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Counseling Theories, Intervention, Time Perspective
Savickas, Mark L. – 1990
Career maturity denotes degree of readiness to make realistic career choices. Clients below a certain threshold of readiness lack the life experiences and personal inclinations needed to make fitting occupational choices. To increase their readiness, a counselor may help these clients develop the decisional attitudes and learn the choice concepts…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Counseling Theories, Readiness, Vocational Maturity
Peterson, J. Vincent; Nisenholz, Bernard – 1990
Transpersonal Counseling and Wholistic Counseling are two relatively new approaches to psychotherapy. Transpersonal counseling is based on the work of transpersonal psychologists who believe that there are potential cognitive, moral, and motivational stages of development beyond those reached by most adults. It suggests a "fourth force"…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Counseling Techniques, Counseling Theories, Psychotherapy
Brown, Michael H. – 1986
Important insights about how to develop human potential are being discovered these days in a field called transpersonal psychology. This new field is called the fourth force in psychology because like psychoanalysis, behaviorism, and humanistic psychology before it, it is on the cutting edge of what it means to be fully human. It seeks to develop…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Human Resources, Labor Force Development
Bohart, Arthur C. – 1999
There is relatively little theory on how psychotherapy clients self-heal since most theories of therapy stress the magic of the therapist's interventions. Of the theories that exist, this paper briefly discusses Carl Rogers' theory of self-actualization; and the dialectical theories of Greenberg and his colleagues, Jenkins, and Rychlak. Gendlin's…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Personality Change, Psychotherapy, Self Actualization
Stickel, Sue A. – 1992
The purpose of this paper is to explore the implications of chaos theory for counseling. The scientific notion of chaos refers to the tendency of dynamical, nonlinear systems toward irregular, sometimes unpredictable, yet deterministic behavior. Therapists, especially those working from a brief approach, have noted the importance of the client's…
Descriptors: Chaos Theory, Clinical Psychology, Counseling Techniques, Counseling Theories
Robinson, Viviane; Halliday, Jan – 1986
This paper concerns microcounseling approaches which involve teaching the component behaviors of effective counseling or interviewing within a problem-solving framework. It notes that Egan, Ivey and Carkhuff, as proponents of this view, stress that later action stages of the problem-solving cycle should be based on an adequate understanding of the…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Counselor Training, Evaluation, Microcounseling