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Wilks, Duffy; Ratheal, Juli D'Ann – Counseling and Values, 2011
Effective counseling practice continues to be inevitably linked to underlying theories of behavioral causality. In this article, the authors present the Moral Capacity Profile of an individual from the perspective of the Amoral, Moral, Quasi-Moral/Quasi-Immoral, and Immoral Model of Behavior, a model that uniquely expands counseling's theoretical…
Descriptors: Theory Practice Relationship, Profiles, Counseling Techniques, Models
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Marquis, Andre – Counseling and Values, 2007
Integral theory is a way of knowing that helps foster the recognition that disparate aspects of reality--such as biological constitution, cultural worldviews, felt-sense of selfhood, and social systems--are all critically important to any knowledge quest. Integral theory provides an "all quadrants, all levels" (K. Wilber, 2006, p. 26)…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Theory Practice Relationship, Models, Counselors
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Roffey, Arthur E. – Counseling and Values, 1993
Advocates humanities-philosophy model of therapeutic practice that emphasizes empowering and promoting understanding in client by encouraging client to investigate and choose between alternative meaning structures in context of trusting human relationship. Proposes integration of existential and postmodern attitudes as template for understanding…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Counselor Attitudes, Existentialism, Models
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Mahalik, James R. – Counseling and Values, 1992
Applying Kluckhorn's Value-Orientation model using the Intercultural Values Inventory with counseling practitioners, the author hypothesized that practitioners would endorse alternatives within value orientations according to their counseling orientation and, as a group, endorse certain alternatives within value orientations over others.…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Counselor Attitudes, Models, Psychologists
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Rogers, Carl R. – Counseling and Values, 1987
Elaborates a theory of tension reduction among antagonistic groups that has progressed from a theory growing out of individual psychotherapy to a well-tried model used in a workshop of international leaders focused on a specific crisis situation. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, International Relations, Models, Peace
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Brennan, Cecile – Counseling and Values, 1995
For therapy to have integrity, the therapist needs a theoretical foundation but not to become rigidly defined by that orientation. The insights of chaos theory and postmodernism can be applied to resolve the apparent conflict between theory and practice and to recognize the finite nature of all theories. (LKS)
Descriptors: Chaos Theory, Creative Thinking, Divergent Thinking, Models
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Wilbur, Michael B.; And Others – Counseling and Values, 1995
This article presents the perspective that chaos theory may provide a more flexible, nonlinear, and effective model and basis for the preparation and education of counselors than competing linear-causal models. (Author)
Descriptors: Chaos Theory, Competence, Counseling, Counselor Training
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Butz, Michael R. – Counseling and Values, 1995
Chaos theory has recently become a central area of scientific interest in psychology. This article explores the psychological meaning and deeper philosophical issues and cultural roots surrounding various views of chaos and provides a multicultural perspective of origins and development of the idea of chaos and its relationship to chaos theory.…
Descriptors: Chaos Theory, Concept Formation, Creative Thinking, Cultural Context