1989
DOI: 10.1002/j.1556-6978.1989.tb01139.x
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Ego Development and Counseling Ability During Training

Abstract: In separate analogue and naturalistic studies, we investigated the impact of ego level on the counseling ability of beginning and advanced students.

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Cited by 35 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…With reference to ego development, the literature has documented that counselors with higher levels of ego maturity are more effective with their clients and demonstrate greater adaptivity (Borders & Fong, 1989;McIntyre, 1985;Watt et al, 2002). The finding that the modal level for the participants' ego development was at the self-aware (E5) level is consistent with the previous research and supports the difficulty in advancing beyond this level of development (Manners & Durkin, 2000).…”
Section: Implications For Professional School Counselingsupporting
confidence: 74%
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“…With reference to ego development, the literature has documented that counselors with higher levels of ego maturity are more effective with their clients and demonstrate greater adaptivity (Borders & Fong, 1989;McIntyre, 1985;Watt et al, 2002). The finding that the modal level for the participants' ego development was at the self-aware (E5) level is consistent with the previous research and supports the difficulty in advancing beyond this level of development (Manners & Durkin, 2000).…”
Section: Implications For Professional School Counselingsupporting
confidence: 74%
“…The positive relationship between personal accomplishment and ego development also seems to extend the notion that higher levels of cognitive development are more functional (Kohlberg, 1981). This fundamental assumption has been supported in the previous counseling research (Borders & Fong, 1989;McIntyre, 1985;Watt, Robinson, & Lupton-Smith, 2002). In brief, it can be concluded that PSCs at higher levels of ego development preserve boundaries and engage in self-care, which enables them to accept their occupational limitations and maintain affirmative feelings about their work.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…Thus, the more global assessments required by constructive development theory regarding developmental capacity might allow counselor educators to measure students' personal characteristics more comprehensively. In fact, the idea of incorporating separate characteristics into an overall evolving personality structure that influences how a person makes meaning was the initial reason for establishing constructive developmental theory (Belenky, Clinchy, Goldberger, & Tarule, 1986;Borders & Fong, 1989;Kegan, 1982Kegan, , 1994Loevinger, 1976).…”
Section: Developmental Theory: An Alternative Predictormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The nonvalidated instruments used in research included (a) a global scale ranging from "damaging" to "accurate" for the first eight counselor responses in an interview (Borders & Fong, 1989), (b) the Counseling Effectiveness Rating Scale (Zinn, 1996), (c) an author-created measure of six counseling functions (Benack, 1988), and (d) an inductive analysis of student interviews (McAuliffe, 2002). The limited range of counseling skills measured was observed in research that examined only empathy as a dependent variable (e.g., Benack, 1988;Lovell, 1999).…”
Section: Problems In the Measurement Of Counseling Abilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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