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Savickas, Mark L. – Journal of Counseling & Development, 2012
A new paradigm is implicit within the constructivist and narrative methods for career intervention that have emerged in the 21st century. This article makes that general pattern explicit by abstracting its key elements from the specific instances that substantiate the new conceptual model. The paradigm for life design interventions constructs…
Descriptors: Intervention, Models, Constructivism (Learning), Career Development
Pender, Rebecca L. – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2012
Group work is often a preferred method of intervention when treating perpetrators of domestic violence. The Domestic Abuse Intervention Project Duluth Model is one of the most common treatment programs for men who have perpetrated domestic violence (Pence & Paymar, 2003), yet the intervention remains highly debated within the literature. This…
Descriptors: Intervention, Family Violence, Guidelines, Best Practices
Akhurst, J.; Liebenberg, M. – South African Journal of Higher Education, 2009
This article integrates previous research findings and theory to reflect on the limitations of traditional career counselling for students from disadvantaged backgrounds. It highlights the many challenges faced by students as they adjust to the university environment, and proposes a constructivist approach as more appropriate for career…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Foreign Countries, Career Counseling, Models
Hartung, Paul J.; Porfeli, Erik J.; Vondracek, Fred W. – Career Development Quarterly, 2008
Childhood marks the dawn of vocational development, involving developmental tasks, transitions, and change. Children must acquire the rudiments of career adaptability to envision a future, make educational and vocational decisions, explore self and occupations, and problem solve. The authors situate child vocational development within human life…
Descriptors: Children, Career Development, Vocational Adjustment, Counseling Theories
Duys, David K.; Ward, Janice E.; Maxwell, Jane A.; Eaton-Comerford, Leslie – Career Development Quarterly, 2008
This article explores implications of Tiedeman's original theory for career counselors. Some components of the theory seem to be compatible with existing volatile job market conditions. Notions of career path recycling, development in reverse, nonlinear progress, and parallel streams in career development are explored. Suggestions are made for…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Career Counseling, Career Development, Counseling Psychology
Goldenthal, Peter – 1986
Common factors contributing to the effectiveness of psychotherapy have come to be recognized. These include: (1) establishment of a safe, trusting, and supportive relationship; (2) encouragement of clients to engage in activities they had avoided; (3) provision of accurate feedback to clients; and (4) provision of a framework for clients to…
Descriptors: Counseling Effectiveness, Counseling Theories, Intervention, Models
Cheston, Sharon E. – Counselor Education and Supervision, 2000
Discusses a paradigm for understanding the myriad of counseling theories and their corresponding intervention techniques. The paradigm organizes counseling theory and practice around three principles: a way of being, a way of understanding, and a way of intervening. The paradigm allows counselors to eclectically use various theories and techniques…
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, Counseling Theories, Counselor Performance, Intervention

Blocher, Donald H.; Rapoza, Rita S. – Elementary School Guidance and Counseling, 1972
A discussion of the systematic eclectic model illustrating its use in the daily duties of a school counselor. This is a flexible model which can be used in a wide range of situations and interventions. (JC)
Descriptors: Change Agents, Consultants, Counseling Theories, Counselor Role

Follingstad, Diane R. – American Journal of Family Therapy, 1988
Presents flow chart of the process of psychotherapy with couples as way for practitioners to integrate various models of marital therapy into their treatment. Discusses sequentially basic steps and questions to be addressed; resolution of each stage is considered important for movement to following stages. Notes flow chart allows intervention…
Descriptors: Counseling Objectives, Counseling Theories, Flow Charts, Intervention

Walsh, Froma – Family Relations, 2002
Presents an overview of a research-informed family resilience framework, developed as a conceptual map to guide clinical intervention and prevention efforts with vulnerable families. Outlines key processes that foster resilience and innovative family systems training and service applications. (JDM)
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Family Counseling, Family Relationship, Intervention

Gerber, Sterling – Journal of Counseling & Development, 2001
Reflecting on the principle that every effective counseling intervention works to the extent that it incorporates sound learning principles, this article emphasizes intentional selection of intervention strategies with reference to four learning models. Three contexts-developmental, social, and spiritual-are described that require modification of…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Counseling Effectiveness, Counseling Theories, Intervention

Goldberg, Gale – Social Work, 1974
A model of intervention for meeting human needs through structural rather than individual change is described. The assumptions are that social structures cause social problems, clients are adequate people victimized by inadequate social arrangements, and social workers should act as agents of social change. Principles guiding such practice are…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Counseling Theories, Counselor Role, Intervention
Daniels, M. Harry – Journal of College Student Personnel, 1982
Summarizes Harren's (1979) career decision-making model. Identifies in six steps how the model can be used as a systematic method for working with career clients. Demonstrates usage of this systematic method through a case study. Suggests this method enhances the counselor-client relationship. (JAC)
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Case Studies, Counseling Techniques, Counseling Theories
Bobele, Monte – 1982
Using wife battering as a representative presenting problem, this paper presents an interactional, systematic framework of the therapist's management of clients who are involved in life-threatening situations, e.g., cases including suicidal threats, drug abuse, alcoholism, or child or spouse abuse. Several linear-causal theories of addressing…
Descriptors: Battered Women, Counseling Techniques, Counseling Theories, Counselor Client Relationship
Gerber, Sterling K. – 1982
This paper is an attempt to develop a therapeutic stance, responsive therapy, for counselors that abandons the effort to select the one "true" therapeutic emphasis, and is based on the assumption that all therapeutic emphases are "true." A description of counselor behavior ensues which enhances a therapeutic atmosphere, moves…
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, Counseling Theories, Counselor Client Relationship, Counselors