Asian Americans have been touted as the "model minority" since the 1960s. The authors examine the prevalence, accuracy, and implications of this label, and, based on a review of the literature, discuss problems associated with this characterization. The authors point out ways in which such labeling impedes rather than facilitates access to various opportunities and also results in discrimination and societal indifference regarding the needs of Asian Americans.Los Americanos Asiáticos han sido recomendados como el "modelo de la minoria" desde la década de los 60. Los autores examinan la frecuencia, la certeza, y las implicaciones de este contenido, y basados en una revisión de la literatura, discute los problemas asociados con esta caracterización. Los autores indican las maneras en que los contenidos estorba en vez de facilitar el acceso a varias oportunidades y también resultado en la discriminación y la indiferencia social con respecto a las necesidades de Americanos Asiáticos.
We investigated the relation of help-seeking history, sex, and depression to college students' attitudes, beliefs, and intentions about obtaining professional psychological help. College students completed questionnaires that included the Beck Depression Inventory (Beck, Ward, Mendelson, Mock, & Erbaugh, 1961), an inquiry about help-seeking history, and an attitude scale constructed according to the method posited in the theory of reasoned action (Ajzen & Fishbein, 1980). Of these 429, 126 who represented extremes of the depression continuum were selected as subjects for data analyses. Though sex differences were not found, results indicated that the experience of having sought help is positively related to how one feels about seeking help and that the experience of depression, regardless of help-seeking history, is also related to more positive attitudes, beliefs, and intentions. Implications for educative interventions are considered.Research in counseling psychology is replete with efforts to better understand and describe potential clients of counseling services. One particular question that continues to provoke empirical examination concerns the factors that are most influential in the decision to seek professional counseling. Approaches to this issue are varied and have included work on client expectations about the nature of counseling (
Motivations and experiences relevant to the career choices of 56 clinical psychologists practicing psychotherapy were assessed and compared with those from a sample of 53 social psychologists. Clinical psychologists were more likely than social psychologists to have been influenced in their career selections by (a) experiences of psychological distress in themselves and in their families of origin, (b) desires to resolve personal problems, and (c) a wish to pursue opportunities for vocational achievement and professional advancement. However, most respondents did not view problematic histories as central to their choice of career, and the magnitude of difference between the two groups of professionals was small. Results illuminate reasons why individuals choose careers as psychotherapists. Implications for the training of therapists are also discussed.
In the first part of this article we present several perspectives on maladaptive perfectionism and discuss the origins and characteristics of this cognitive-behavioral pattern. In the second part of the article, we offer some recommendations for treating college students who are troubled by ego-dystonic perfectionism.
Richard P. Halgin is an associate professor in the
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