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Jensen, Margaret Jean – ProQuest LLC, 2011
The focus of this study was the exploration of specific developmental dimensions that may have an impact on the counselor training process, which ultimately will affect the quality of care offered by counselors to clients. Specifically, the relationship of cognitive developmental level and counseling competency skills was examined to determine if…
Descriptors: Counselor Training, Counseling, Trainees, Counselor Educators
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Elliott, Glenda R. – Alabama Counseling Association Journal, 2011
Based on the core conditions of client-centered counseling and supported by aspects of psychodynamic, cognitive developmental, and behavioral theories, a perspective is introduced that provides a resolution to the dilemma experienced by counselors and counseling students whose personal values and beliefs conflict with the ethical guidelines of the…
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, Conflict, Values, Ethics
Garrity, Mary Kate – Canadian Journal of Counselling and Psychotherapy, 2011
This social constructivist/constructionist research explores changes in female therapists' intimate relationships after they began working with survivors of female sexual violence. Discourse analysis found that working with survivors shifted participants' initially naive understanding of female sexual violence, as they developed a critical…
Descriptors: Violence, Sexual Abuse, Transformative Learning, Intimacy
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Lambie, Glenn W.; Hagedorn, W. Bryce; Ieva, Kara P. – Counselor Education and Supervision, 2010
Counselors are required to have high levels of social-cognitive development, significant knowledge regarding ethical and legal practice, and sound ethical decision-making processes to provide effective and ethical services to their clients. This study investigated the effect of two counseling ethics courses on 64 master's-level counselor education…
Descriptors: Counselor Training, Decision Making, Ethics, Cognitive Development
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Williams, D. I.; Irving, J. A. – British Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 1996
Asserts the rationale for personal development work in counselor training stems directly from Rogers' claim of a selective constructive tendency. The basis for this belief and its implementation in experiential learning shows a number of paradoxes, however. As a result, this article states the Rogerian rationale for personal development work is…
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Development, Counseling, Counselor Training
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Choate, Laura Hensley; Granello, Darcy Haag – Counselor Education and Supervision, 2006
The development of cognitively complex counselors has been identified as an important component of counselor education. However, there are no models to provide direction for programs to systematically promote student cognitive growth over the entire course of their graduate education. In many counseling programs, the faculty adviser is the one…
Descriptors: Graduate Study, Faculty Advisers, Counseling, Cognitive Development
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Stoltenberg, Cal D. – Counseling Psychologist, 1998
Discusses the SCMCT (Social Cognitive Model of Counselor Training) as presented by Larson in this issue of JCP. Provides considerations relevant to further research including the relationship of self-efficacy to counseling efficacy, the addition of a developmental perspective, level of trainee development, the role of affect, cognitive processing,…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Cognitive Development, Counseling, Counseling Effectiveness