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Stewig, John Warren – Elementary English, 1973
Discusses how graphotherapy (analyzing penmanship strokes) could provide a definite, behavioral criteria of each student on a personalized basis. (MM)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Child Development, Handwriting, Personality Development

Wright, Logan – Psychology in the Schools, 1972
The results of this investigation demonstrate the reliability of ratings of accurate empathy and nonpossessive warmth during psychotherapeutic intervention with children. (Author)
Descriptors: Child Psychology, Children, Intervention, Personality Development

Villoldo, Alberto – Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 1977
Psychosynthesis as developed by Salvador Roquet presents a new method combining Freudian, Frommian, and transpersonal therapies. Its immediate result is to obtain results expected from long-term psychoanalysis in an abbreviated period of time. It also helps the individual take responsibility for his own development. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Drug Therapy, Group Dynamics, Personality Development, Program Descriptions

Haronian, Frank – Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 1975
A psychosynthetic model of personality was presented as well as several inferences for an eclectic but systematic approach to psychotherapy which embraces a variety of methods, can be ordered in a reasonable sequence, and used within a therapist-client relationship which is existentially structured. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Definitions, Humanism, Models, Personality Development
LeShan, Lawrence – Saturday Review (New York 1975), 1975
Described methods of meditation, how it can benefit mankind, and warned of fraudulent teachers. (RK)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Fraud, Meditation, Personality Change

Kegan, Robert Graham – Counseling Psychologist, 1979
Considers a neo-Piagetian address to the processes of personality and its implications for counseling or psychotherapy. Although the neo-Piagetian framework is different, its metaphors and premises may make it the better equipped to deal with the issues central to those psychologies most influential to the counseling enterprise. (Author)
Descriptors: Counseling, Individual Development, Motivation, Personality Development
Mayer, John D. – American Psychologist, 2005
Personality psychology studies how psychological systems work together. Consequently, the field can act as a unifying resource for the broader discipline of psychology. Yet personality's current fieldwide organization promotes a fragmented view of the person, seen through such competing theories as the psychodynamic, trait, and humanistic. There…
Descriptors: Personality, Psychology, Personality Development, Psychotherapy

Ward, Alan J. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1978
Examines the effect of three years of structural therapy on inpatient cases of early childhood autism (ECA). Treatment resulted in the discharge of 12 patients. Results indicate that high stimulation, physically intrusive, gamelike, novelty filled, and developmentally oriented treatment of structural therapy can produce significant improvement in…
Descriptors: Arousal Patterns, Autism, Personality Development, Physical Activity Level

Barrett, Thomas C.; Harren, Vincent A. – Counseling Psychologist, 1979
Reviews and comments upon articles by Jane Loevinger and Robert Kegan devoted to self and ego. A spiral-process model of self-conception is offered as an elaboration of the processes that might be involved in equilibration. The clarifying purpose of theory should not be forgotten. A phenomenological perspective is presented. (Author/BEF)
Descriptors: Individual Development, Models, Personality Development, Philosophy

Fernald, Peter S. – Journal of Counseling & Development, 2000
C. R. Rogers' approach is examined in the context of person-centered theories of personality and counseling. Identifies similarities between Rogers' thinking and W. Reich's theories in body-oriented psychotherapy. Discusses film-recorded interview conducted by Rogers, which demonstrates his body-centered approach. (Author/JDM)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Counseling, Counseling Theories, Films

Lynch, Gordon – British Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 1997
Explores the foundation of therapeutic theory from the perspective of social constructionism. Proposes a theoretical description of the interaction between an individual and the social context in the formation of therapeutic theory. Then explores this description in relation to the early life and subsequent therapeutic theory of Carl Rogers. (RJM)
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Counseling Theories, Individual Development, Personality Development

Aarkrog, Tove – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1977
The symptoms of, and possible treatments for 21 borderline and psychotic adolescents who had suffered from borderline psychoses in childhood were examined from a developmental point of view. It was concluded that therapeutic possibilities exist. Some childhood symptoms could be used directly in treatment, while others disappeared with general…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Drug Therapy, Emotional Disturbances, Handicapped Children

Holden, Janice Miner – Counseling and Values, 2004
This article explains the author's guiding theory of counseling based on her understanding and adaptation of K. Wilber's (2000b) integral psychology (11). She discusses, from an IT perspective, how the psyche develops and changes and the role of counseling in change. She explains her particular resonance to IT, which she considers an inherently…
Descriptors: Counseling Theories, Counseling Techniques, Counseling Psychology, Psychotherapy
Bernet, Michael – 1996
There is no accepted definition and no adequate measure for the concept of Emotional Intelligence (EI). Some of the myriad issues surrounding EI are discussed here. One problem in the consideration of EI is the confusion between the terms "feelings" and "emotions." Differences between the two are examined and a working definition of feelings is…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Emotional Experience, Emotional Intelligence, Emotional Problems
Paris, Joel – 2000
This book calls into question the degree to which early childhood experiences affect psychological development, critiquing three related myths: (1) personality is formed by early childhood experiences; (2) mental disorders are caused by early childhood experiences; and (3) effective psychotherapy depends on reconstructing childhood experiences.…
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Children, Early Experience, Memory