“…It is our position that group therapy has a technique, literature, history, and identity of its own which needs to be part of the formal graduate curriculum and not learned haphazardly during field placements, internships, and residencies. In trying to account for the comparative neglect in group therapy training, researchers have focused on negative attitudes of the faculty concerning the efficacy of group therapy, faculties being undertrained and relatively inexperienced in doing group therapy, a shortage or complete absence of organized patient groups in many settings, and problems in working out the experiential part of group therapy curricula (Salvendy, 1977(Salvendy, , 1985Yalom, 1985).…”