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Anthony, William A.; And Others – Counselor Education and Supervision, 1974
A variety of traditional and nontraditional selection indices were used to predict the outcome of a graduate-level course in counseling which was specifically designed to improve the students' human relations skills. The need for a new and more efficient predictive model for graduate-level counselor training is discussed. (Author)
Descriptors: Counselor Training, Graduate Students, Models, Predictor Variables
Gazda, George M. – 1974
Systematic Human Relations Training (SHRT) is predicated on the basic assumption that there are certain core helper-offered conditions that are necessary in a helping relationship, i.e., empathy, respect, warmth, concreteness, genuineness, self-disclosure confrontation, and immediacy. This, however, is only part of the model. The second basic…
Descriptors: Helping Relationship, Human Relations, Models, Nonprofessional Personnel
Mink, Oscar G. – 1975
Internal-External Locus of Control refers to the extent to which persons perceive contingency relationships between their actions and subsequent outcomes. Those who believe they have some control over payoffs in their lives are called "Internals.""Externals," on the other hand, believe consequences are directed by agents outside of themselves.…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Behavior Modification, College Students, Counseling
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Vander Kolk, Charles J. – College Student Journal, 1975
A model for developing teacher interpersonal skill was employed to improve teacher-student relationships. Teachers (N=18) received 20 hours of training that consisted of studying human relationship skills, listening to taped examples of good relationships, and practice through role playing. Teachers did significantly increase their ability to…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Competence, Models, Perception, Rating Scales
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King, Mark – Small Group Behavior, 1976
The major concern of this study is changes in self-acceptance as related to different college classroom models. The specific research hypothesis is that self-acceptance increases as a function of the encounter classroom model. This was confirmed. Increased self-acceptance also appeared stable over time. (NG)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Classroom Environment, College Students, Higher Education