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Quealy-Berge, Diana; Caldwell, Karen – Counselor Education and Supervision, 2004
Training for interprofessional collaboration is important because professionals are increasingly required to work together in a coordinated and collaborative manner to meet the complex needs of clients. However, few published reports exist on interprofessional training for community counselors and marriage and family therapists. The authors…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Marriage Counseling, Ethics, Interprofessional Relationship
Long, Janie K.; Serovich, Julianne M. – Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 2003
Many authors have questioned the preparedness of family therapists to deal with sexual minority clients. Even though the Commission on Accreditation for Marriage and Family Therapy Education (COAMFTE) has called for the integration of sexual orientation into the curriculum of marriage and family therapy training programs, the subject continues to…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, Family Counseling, Marriage Counseling, Therapy
Tallman, Irving; Hsiao, Ying-Ling – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2004
Couple cooperation is hypothesized to be essential in the resolution of interpersonal marital problems. Data from a sample of newlywed couples support this hypothesis as well as the validity of our measure of cooperation. We then test a model stipulating marital satisfaction and trust as antecedent conditions leading to cooperative problem solving…
Descriptors: Marital Instability, Marital Satisfaction, Structural Equation Models, Cooperation
Murphy, Megan J.; Wright, David W. – Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 2005
In this study, we examined the use of power in the supervisory relationship from supervisees' perspectives. Semistructured interviews of 11 supervisees in a Commission on Accreditation for Marriage and Family Therapy Education training program were conducted. From analysis of interview transcripts, themes about the ways in which supervisors and…
Descriptors: Therapy, Confidentiality, Supervisor Supervisee Relationship, Family Counseling
Winters, Susan; And Others – 1995
Widely varying reports on the effects of divorce on children have created considerable confusion among therapists. Most traditionally trained secular marriage therapists view their position as that of an impartial mediator with emphasis on the well being of the individual. It has been generally accepted that the religious marital therapists are…
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, Counselor Attitudes, Counselor Characteristics, Counselor Role
Bloser, Edward Charles – 1993
The conflict in research that exists between the relationship of marital adjustment and sibling constellation is examined here. The belief that the combination of birth order and gender (sibling constellation) is important, is not only a part of folk wisdom but it is a continuing point of view in the literature of marital and family therapy. Data…
Descriptors: Birth Order, Family Influence, Family Size, Family (Sociological Unit)

Hollander, Elaine K.; Vollmer, Howard M. – Youth and Society, 1974
In a pilot study conducted on a sample of predominantly white, middle-class students in a mid-Atlantic private university, the relationship between residential environment and attitudes toward marriage was explored. The study demonstrated an affinity between cohabitation before marriage or living in communal groups and belief in equalitarian sex…
Descriptors: College Students, Family (Sociological Unit), Family Environment, Family Life
Moy, Caryl T.; Goodman, Earl O. – 1983
A common assumption in family therapy supervision is that the relationship between supervisor and supervisee changes over time, following a developmental continuum from the tentative competency of the supervisee as a therapist to relative competency. In particular, Ard (1973) theorizes that supervisees and supervisors move steadily together…
Descriptors: Competence, Counselor Performance, Counselor Training, Family Counseling
Hedstrom, Lloyd J.; Hedstrom, Betty J. – 1983
As the number of married college students increases, there is growing interest in the impact of graduate study on marital adjustment. In an attempt to determine whether studying psychology and marriage counseling would ameliorate the stressful effects of graduate study on spouses, 72 psychology graduate students who were specializing in Marriage,…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Coping, Graduate Students, Graduate Study
Fincham, Frank; O'Leary, K. Daniel – 1982
A defining feature of behavior therapy is its application of general psychological principles and its consequent responsiveness to developments in general psychology. However, there are indications that a new movement already labeled in behavioral circles as "affect in the eighties" may be influencing the cognitive behavior therapy of…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Affective Objectives, Attitude Measures, Behavior Modification

Belson, Richard – Counseling Psychologist, 1975
Uses a case study to explore the role of counselor and clients and the interactive process that should begin to occur in a second interview during marriage counseling. Concludes with comments and critique of the articles. (EJT)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Case Studies, Counseling Effectiveness, Crisis Intervention

Little, William – Counseling Psychologist, 1975
Presents a counseling session with a couple who are considering divorce. Then, using critique and commentary at the end of the case study, attempts to get at some of the issues, theories and techniques of marriage counseling. (EJT)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Case Studies, Communication (Thought Transfer), Counseling Effectiveness
Williams, Frank R.; O'Hern, Lynn K. – 1979
This is a description of a workshop focusing on the couple in the remarried family, and stressing the development of a balanced, effectively working family system. The workshop content, which functions through didactic presentations, leader-led exercises, group interactions and homework, addresses the following topics: (1) communication…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Divorce, Family Counseling, Family Relationship

Stranges, Richard J. – 1975
Adlerians believe that change of any lasting value has a fundamental dependency on the client's awareness of how he incorrectly processes data in his life; he must develop the insight necessary to correct the errors in his life style. Also, the therapist must know the goals of the client's behavior in order to make relevant comments in therapy.…
Descriptors: Adults, Behavior Problems, Counseling Theories, Creative Thinking

Rogers, Martha L. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 1978
"Fascinating womanhood" ("total woman") is explored as a response to anxiety generated by awareness of the potential for experiencing the self as a separate, responsible person. A therapeutic approach that can be utilized in encouraging optimal individuation is discussed, with group, marital, and individual therapy examples. Precautions are also…
Descriptors: Emotional Development, Females, Individual Development, Marriage Counseling