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Psychologist training with religion and spirituality in therapy sessions
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Psychologist training with religion and spirituality in therapy sessions
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Description
Identifier
Thesis
2067
Author
Barry, Sarah Jeanne, 1980-
Title
Psychologist
training
with
religion
and
spirituality
in
therapy
sessions
Publisher
Central Connecticut State University
Date
2010
Resource Type
Master's Thesis
Notes
This
thesis
was
concerned
with the
question
of how
religion
and
gender
might
affect
clinical
perceptions
and
judgments
in
psychotherapy
.
Participants
were
378
psychologists
and
members
of the
APA
.
Participants
answered
a
number
of
questions
about
psychotherapeutic
decision
making
.
Demographic
and
vignettes
;
Affair
,
Prayer
and
Dress
,
varied
by
religion
and/or
gender
of
client
and
therapists
,
data
was
collected
. The
overall
hypotheses
asked
if
participants’
judgments
would be
affected
by
gender
and
religious
affiliation
of the
therapist
and
client
. A
MANOVA
analysis
showed
that the
results
of the
study
confirmed
some
of the
hypotheses
,
finding
significant
differences
for a
number
of
variables
. A
Muslim
female
client
would be
more
likely
to
excuse
the
indiscretions
made
by her
partner
than a
male
client
. For the
Prayer
vignette
,
religion
of the
therapist
was
significant
. For the
Dress
vignette
,
religion
of
client
was
found
significant
.
“Would
a
therapist
need
specific
religious
training
to
best
help
the
patient”
was
found
significant
,
meaning
that if the
client
was
Muslim
then the
therapist
would
need
specific
training
compared
to a
Christian
client
.
Only
15.5%
of the
participants
had
some
form
of
academic
study
on
religions
,
43.4%
received
religious
trainings
through
supervisions
or
informal
teachings
and
31.7%
self
reported
that
no
educational/spiritual
development
experiences
have been
important
to their
therapeutic
practice
. The
recommendations
are that there
is
a
need
for
further
training
or
assistance
when
dealing
with
differing
cultures
. The
results
indicate
the
need
for
structured
diversity
training
for
all
mental
health
practitioners
.
Subject
Psychology--Religious aspects
Sex role--Religious aspects
Psychotherapists--Training of
Department
Department of Psychology
Advisor
Austad, Carol Shaw
Type
Text
Digital Format
application/pdf
Language
eng
OCLC number
713734410
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