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Joy, Phillip; Numer, Matthew – Journal of LGBT Youth, 2017
University can be a critical time for queer identifying youth as they attempt to navigate new relationships and heteronormative and, sometimes, hostile environments. Involvement in queer student groups is one strategy to develop protective mechanisms for these students. This research examines the effect of participation in a queer advocacy group…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Photography, Homosexuality, Student Organizations
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Van Noord, Robert W.; Kagan, Norman – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1976
To study the influence of affect simulation and Interpersonal Process Recall (IPR) techniques on client growth in personal counseling, an integrated affect-simulation/IPR treatment for college student clients was compared with a traditional treatment. Participants in the IPR/affect-simulation treatment did not score significantly higher or lower…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, College Students, Counseling, Growth Patterns
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Burger, Gary K.; And Others – Journal of Personality Assessment, 1975
Two groups of college students' accounts of recalled parent's child rearing patterns were examined and compared in this study by means of two objective personality measures. (Author/DEP)
Descriptors: Adults, Affective Behavior, Children, College Students
Highlen, Pamela S.; Voight, Nancy L. – 1977
The purpose of these companion studies was to assess immediate and delayed effects of social modeling, cognitive structuring, and two self-management strategies for increasing affective self-disclosure in undergraduate males. Subjects were randomly assigned to: (a) social modeling, (b) cognitive structuring, (c) attention-placebo, or (d)…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Behavior Patterns, Cognitive Style, College Students
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Burleson, Brant R.; Samter, Wendy – Communication Research, 1990
Examines individual differences in the value college students place on communication skills by same-sex peers. Finds that affectively oriented skills such as ego support and comforting are rated as more important than nonaffectively oriented skills such as narrative and persuasive abilities. Suggests that persons differing in cognitive complexity…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, College Students, Communication Research, Communication Skills