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Levy, Ian P.; Cook, Amy L.; Emdin, Christopher – Professional School Counseling, 2018
This article explores a model for school counselors to capitalize on the therapeutic, empowerment-oriented nature of hip-hop practices to engage in youth participatory action research (YPAR). Drawing from research that supports the use of hip-hop therapy and YPAR in schools, we propose a culturally sensitive group counseling process wherein…
Descriptors: Models, School Counseling, Music, Popular Culture
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Turner, Sherri L.; Ziebell, Julia L. Conkel – Professional School Counseling, 2011
This research explored the career beliefs of inner-city adolescents (N = 97). Results identified six types of beliefs: success is related to effort, job satisfaction, work interest and liking, flexibility/adaptability, achievement and persistence, and toleration of uncertainty. A majority of these young people believed that their success was not…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Urban Youth, Beliefs, Middle School Students
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Vera, Elizabeth M.; Vacek, Kimberly; Coyle, Laura D.; Stinson, Jennifer; Mull, Megan; Doud, Katherine; Buchheit, Christine; Gorman, Catherine; Hewitt, Amber; Keene, Chesleigh; Blackmon, Sha'kema; Langrehr, Kimberly J. – Professional School Counseling, 2011
This study explored relations between culturally relevant stressors (i.e., urban hassles, perceived discrimination) and subjective well-being (SWB; i.e., positive/ negative affect, life satisfaction) to examine whether ethnic identity and/or coping strategies would serve as moderators of the relations between stress and SWB for 157 urban, ethnic…
Descriptors: Urban Youth, Adolescents, Middle School Students, Minority Groups
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Diver-Stamnes, Ann C. – Urban Education, 1991
A peer counseling program in a 1,800-student inner-city high school (60 percent Latinos, 35 percent African Americans, and 5 percent others) appears successful when evaluated for the following: student knowledge acquisition; student evaluation of the program; students' impact on school and community through counseling sessions; and impact on the…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Black Students, Blacks, Educationally Disadvantaged