The article reports the pilot study results of a Structured Group Supervision (SGS) model. The structured model of group supervision seemed superior in comparison with “control” group supervision.
The authors address the lack of information about the identity development of Vietnamese refugee women. Although their age and time of arrival to the United States have a major impact on Vietnamese refugee women's identity development, a review of the historical and sociopolitical influences on the identity development of this group also plays an important role in understanding their resiliency, traditional and nontraditional frames of references, and coping mechanisms.
Native American humor is explored through a brief discussion of the current literature regarding the use of humor in counseling and descriptions of various forms and communication styles of Native humor as spiritual tradition. Implications for multicultural awareness in the use of humor and possible use of Native humor in counseling with Native clients are offered.
El humor del Indio Americano es explorado por una discusión breve de la literatura actual con respecto al uso del humor en aconsejar y descripciones de varios estilos de formas y comunicación del humor Nativo como la tradición espiritual. Las implicaciones para el conocimiento multicultural en el uso del humor y el uso posible del humor Nativo a aconsejar clientes Nativos se ofrecen.
Based on a multimodal viewpoint, this article reviews literature on both alcoholism and controlled drinking approaches, provides a combined perspective of humanistic and behavioral principles, presents the issue of alcohol involvement from a stage phenomena point of view, and suggests intervention steps to address life‐problem, emotional, and behavioral aspects of problem drinking.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.