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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
Schneider, Lawrence J. – 1984
There is a growing trend for some counselors to adopt and advertise specific value positions and counseling orientations. To explore potential clients' perceptions of information contained in "traditional" and "feminist" therapists' announcements of services, 52 males and 52 females received one of four announcements…
Descriptors: College Students, Counseling Services, Counselor Characteristics, Feminism
Shay, Joseph J. – Child Abuse and Neglect: The International Journal, 1992
This discussion of family therapy of sexual abuse survivors addresses the role of therapist countertransference in the treatment process. It is contended that attitudes toward family members and political, moral, and institutional beliefs undergird therapists' countertransference reactions, and consequently underlie interventions. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Counselor Attitudes, Counselor Characteristics, Counselor Client Relationship
Pellegrino, Joseph C. – 1984
Group cohesiveness in psychotherapy is defined as the dynamic process that incorporates the multifactors that establish and maintain members in the therapy group. The development of group cohesiveness and the role of the therapist can be divided into five stages. In the first pregroup stage, the therapist must select clients and prepare them for…
Descriptors: Counselor Client Relationship, Group Dynamics, Group Therapy, Group Unity