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American Journal of Play, 2015
Phyllis Booth is a licensed marriage and family therapist, a licensed clinical professional counselor, a registered play therapist and supervisor, and Clinical Director Emeritus of the Theraplay Institute in Evanston, Illinois. Her professional career includes training in clinical psychology at what is now University of Chicago Medicine, teaching…
Descriptors: Play, Play Therapy, Counseling Techniques, Profiles
Seaman, Jayson – Democracy & Education, 2016
Franklin Vernon provided an example of how programs viewing themselves as "cultural islands" are in fact embedded within historical capitalist relations, through the discourses of "self" that they promote. In this response, I expand on Vernon's argument to situate the quasi-therapeutic practices he identified in the history of…
Descriptors: Group Therapy, Democracy, Outdoor Education, Self Actualization
Hoover, Sally – Journal of Applied School Psychology, 2010
This commentary responds to "Lessons Learned From Leading an Anger Management Group Using the "Seeing Red" Curriculum in an Elementary School," E. L. Sportsman, J. S. Carlson, and K. M. Guthrie's (2010/this issue) account of an anger control intervention's implementation and effectiveness in an elementary school setting. The accompanying article…
Descriptors: Intervention, School Psychologists, Psychological Patterns, Elementary Education
Keats, Patrice Alison – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2009
The commentators' responses to the viability of open groups using Therapeutic Enactment (TE) in a university setting are important. This reply addresses four main points: (a) single versus multiple sessions; (b) principles of brief therapy; (c) issues around training for group leaders; and (d) further research. The author agrees with commentators…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Environment, Psychotherapy, Group Therapy
Dagley, John C.; Thomas, Chippewa M. – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2008
Therapeutic Enactment (TE) groups, as presented in the article, "Time-Limited Service Alternatives: Using Therapeutic Enactment in Open Group Therapy," offer an exciting and promising addition to the types of groups traditionally offered in university counseling centers. The brevity of member participation, the lack of empirical evidence of…
Descriptors: Group Therapy, Higher Education, Guidance Centers, Intervention
A Response to "Time-Limited Service Alternatives: Using Therapeutic Enactment in Open Group Therapy"
Grayshield, Lisa; Waldo, Michael – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2008
This article offers comments on the Keats and Sabharwal article, "Time-Limited Service Alternatives: Using Therapeutic Enactment in Open Group Therapy," including the rationale for the approach, its conceptual base, the group process and ethical issues. Suggestions for further research on this approach are presented, including examination of its…
Descriptors: Group Therapy, Ethics, College Students, Higher Education
Roysircar, Gargi – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2008
The literature is extensive about explanatory behavioral and social effects with an individual or micro focus. A somewhat less programmatic literature exits in social justice that considers systemic or macro factors: for example, mental health service and its structures that perpetuate inequity and disparity in service delivery. Social privilege…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Health Services, Cultural Pluralism, Sexuality
Williams, J. Mark G.; Russell, Ian; Russell, Daphne – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2008
The authors respond to the article by H. F. Coelho, P. H. Canter, and E. Ernst (2007), which reviewed the current status of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT). First, they clarify the randomization procedures in the 2 main MBCT trials. Second, they report posttreatment and follow-up data to show that trial participants allocated to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Restructuring, Depression (Psychology), Psychotherapy, Clinical Psychology

Cooper, Terry D. – Counseling and Values, 1984
Uses Marx's classic critique of religion to explore the social function of therapy groups. Investigates the manner in which groups conserve the status quo and argues that the Marxist critique can help promote a more realistic social awareness and a more effective perception of groups. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Group Therapy, Religion

Leal, Anita – Journal of Counseling and Development, 1992
Will C. Schutz, an encounter groups pioneer, is interviewed about his personal life; the turning points of his life that led to his involvement in group work; his experiences before, at, and after Esalen; and his views on the field of counseling. A list of suggested readings is included. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Counseling, Group Therapy, Interviews

Cohen, Laura J. – Journal of Poetry Therapy, 1989
Presents a unifying theoretical framework for bibliotherapy, based on C. Shrodes' model of bibliotherapy and I. D. Yalom's research on therapeutic factors in group therapy. Draws research and practice implications for both individual and group therapy. (RS)
Descriptors: Bibliotherapy, Group Therapy, Models, Psychotherapy

Morran, D. Keith; Stockton, Rex – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 1985
Group psychotherapy practitioners and researchers rarely share their expertise. Reasons are discussed, and practical suggestions for bridging the gap between abstract theoretical research and clinical practice are made. (Author)
Descriptors: Clinical Experience, Group Therapy, Research, Research Methodology

Kaul, Theodore J. – Counseling Psychologist, 1990
Assesses various Fuhriman, Burlingame, Kivlighan, and Richards articles (1990) as interesting and informative, but offers two criticisms. First, authors made same vocabulary/same meaning assumption about articles they reviewed and did not discuss differences in experiences and truths that might lie behind same vocabulary. Second, they did not…
Descriptors: Basic Vocabulary, Group Therapy, Inferences, Reader Response
Leist, Christine Pollard – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2007
Kirsten Fink-Jensen offers music educators new insights on lesson planning and engagement with students through careful observation and reflective interpretation of active student involvement in music. She suggests that the phenomenon of musical attunement, including facial expressions, gestures, language, and movements that are articulated…
Descriptors: Psychotherapy, Music, Music Teachers, Group Experience

Zuk, Gerald H. – International Journal of Family Therapy, 1979
The author examines the three crises he feels family therapy has passed through in the last three decades, including the need to transcend its focus on schizophrenia and to deal with families differing widely in socioeconimic origin. The current challenge is the need for professionalization of the field. (Author)
Descriptors: Family Counseling, Family Problems, Group Therapy, Psychotherapy