Culture and Counseling: New ApproachesCulture and Counseling has been designed to serve as a resource for professionals in the fields of Multicultural Counseling, Cross-Cultural Counseling, or Diversity and Culture in Counseling. In this authoritative new book, leading authors address culture and counseling as related to theoretical models, American ethnicities, spirituality, immigrants, intercultural families, gender, sexual orientation, diagnosis and interventions, supervision, and ethics. Counseling professionals, psychologists. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 4
Page 210
... baby boomers were aggressively exploring their identities and seeking something to which to cling . They had a style — a way through which they could express themselves . The term stylistic counseling began to form in the early 1970s ...
... baby boomers were aggressively exploring their identities and seeking something to which to cling . They had a style — a way through which they could express themselves . The term stylistic counseling began to form in the early 1970s ...
Page 279
... baby sister as a Christmas present is an inappropriate means of coping or developmentally normal . Other considerations take a systemic perspective . The counselor may strug- gle with determining the relevance of the teacher and ...
... baby sister as a Christmas present is an inappropriate means of coping or developmentally normal . Other considerations take a systemic perspective . The counselor may strug- gle with determining the relevance of the teacher and ...
Page 334
... baby out with the bath water . This discussion has illustrated how modernist theories and practices can interact with postmodernism to make students more sensitive to the stories of their clients . Finally , we have been using the ...
... baby out with the bath water . This discussion has illustrated how modernist theories and practices can interact with postmodernism to make students more sensitive to the stories of their clients . Finally , we have been using the ...
Contents
PART ONE Cultural Viewpoints of Counseling | 1 |
On Becoming an Existential CrossCultural | 20 |
Increasing the Cultural Awareness Knowledge | 31 |
Copyright | |
20 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
acculturation activities African American approach Asian assessment Association authors awareness become behavior beliefs Black challenges chapter client competence concepts concerns considered context continue coun Counseling and Development counselor counselor education countries cross-cultural cultural dimension discussion diverse effective ethnic ethnic identity European example experiences explore factors feelings focus force gender goals Guidance human identity immigrants important increase individual influence International intervention involves issues Journal Journal of Counseling knowledge language Latino learned lifestyle living meaning mental health minority multicultural counseling Native American one's perspective population positive practice presented problems professional programs psychology questions race racial refers relationship role skills social society specific spiritual strategies suggested theory therapists therapy tion traditional transcendent transcultural treatment understanding United University values White worldview York