Multicultural Populations - Humanities
Prepare a discussion by locating articles that address the use of Rogerian’s person-centered approach to reality therapy for a multicultural population.Discuss the articles found and compare the use of Rogerian’s person-centered approach to reality therapy for a multicultural population.Write a 350- to 500-word reflectionInclude the following in your reflection:A brief summary of the discussionA brief summary of the articlesINCLUDE A BRIEF INTRIDUCTIONINCLUDE A BRIEF CONCLUSIONNO PLAGARISAM APA FORMATAccording to Dillon (1993), a study published in 1993, revealed that more than fifty percent of minority clients terminated their service after the very first counseling session compared to only thirty percent of their white counterparts. The study examined rather the counseling approaches were of any significance in multicultural counseling. The answer is yes, black clients preferred Reality Therapy to Rogerians person-centered approach.Counselors need to understand the different stages of minority development, stereotypes, minority culture, and problems the minority face. Counselors should also have a strong understanding of their own beliefs and views regarding minorities.The study found that the real scene was viewed as honest by ninety percent of subjects; only fifty-two percent of subjects viewed the person-centered approach as honest.Dillon R. (1993). What I Hear You Saying Is...: Comparison of Two Counseling Approaches in Interracial Counselor-client Initial Interactions
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CG 024 991
Dillon, Randy K.
What I Hear You Saying Is...: Comparison of Two
Counseling Approaches in Interracial Counselor-Client
Initial Interactions.
Mar 93
25p.; Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the
International Listening Association (Memphis, TN,
March 3-6, 1993).
Reports
Research/Technical (143)
MF01/PC01 Plus Postage.
Black Students; Client Characteristics (Human
Services); *Counseling Techniques; Counselor Client
Relationship; Counselor Role; Ethnicity; Higher
Education; Interpersonal Communication; *Listening
Skills; *Minority Groups; *Nondirective Counseling;
Racial Differences; *Reality Therapy; *Termination of
Treatment; Undergraduate Students
ABSTRACT
It has been estimated that, by the year 2000, 30\% of
the American population will hold minority status. More than 50\% of
minority individuals who seek counseling services terminate after the
first session, compared to 30\% for white clients. This study examined
whether counseling technique was a relevant factor in multicultural
counseling by comparing the Rogerian person-centered approach to
reality therapy in counseling dyads involving a white counselor and a
black client. Black undergraduate students (N=31) viewed videotaped
counseling sessions that used either reality therapy or
person-centered therapy and completed feedback forms expressing their
degree of satisfaction with each scene. The findings revealed that
black students viewed reality therapy as more beneficial than
person-centered therapy. Black students viewed reality therapy more
favorably than person-centered therapy on 7 of 15 statements. The
counselor in the reality scene was viewed as honest by 90\% of
subjects, while the counselor in the person-centered scene was viewed
as honest by 52\% of the subjects. Only 29\% of the subjects felt that
the client on the videotape should return to the person-centered
counselor, compared to 81\% who agreed that the client should return
to the reality therapy counselor. (NB)
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Listening in Counseling
1
What I hear you saying is...:
Comparison of two counseling approaches
in interracial counselor-client initial interactions
Randy K. Dillon
University of Florida
Department of Communication Processes and Disorders
336 Dauer Hall
Gainesville, FL
32611
Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the
International Listening Association,
Memphis, Tennessee, March 3-6, 1993
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LISTENING IN COUNSELING
4!
BEST COPY AVAILABLE
Listening in Counseling
2
4
What I hear you saying is...:
Comparision of two counseling approaches
in interracial counselor-client initial interactions
Abstract
The continual increase of ethnic minorities in the
United States deserve attention.
It is estimated that
by 2000, 30 percent of the American population will hold
minority status.
More than 50 percent of minority
individuals seeking counseling terminate after the first
session, compared to 30 percent of Whites (Sue, 1990).
Black Americans are presently the largest minority group
in the United States.
This paper examines whether or not
counseling technique is a relevant factor in multicultural
counseling.
The Rogerian Person-centered approach will
be compared to the Reality Therapy approach in counseling
dyads involving a White counselor and a Black client.
Emphasis is given to how listening is perceived in
establishing trust, caring, and empathy in interracial
counseling dyads, and if the client is empowered to continue
counseling.
Listening in Counseling
c
3
What I hear you saying is...:
Comparison of two counseling approaches
in interracial counselor-client initial interactions
A recent report in Time (Henry, 1990) discussed the
Browning of America.
According to the report the Black,
Hispanic, and Asian populations are increasing at such
a rapid rate that within two decades the White majority
will become the minority.
As the United States approaches
the year 2000, it is important for the U.S culture to
listen accurately for crosscultural cues (Borisoff &
Purdy, 1991, p. 316).
With statistics showing that over half of ethnic
minorities seeking counseling terminate after only one
session, it becomes quite clear that counselors are not
meeting the needs of minority clients (Sue, 1990).
This paper focuses on counseling needs of Black Americans,
particularly on the listening of interpersonal communicatIon
cues such as empathy, interest, honesty, and understanding
during an initial interracial counselor-client interaction.
In counseling Black Americans, there are several
factors to consider.
The counselor needs to be aware of
the different stages of minority development (Morten,
Atkinson, and Sue, 1979), stereotypes, knowledge of minority
cultures, and the problems facing minorities.
More
Listening in Counseling
4
importantly, counselors nud to know themselves (Hulnick,
1977).
Counselors need to know their own beliefs and
attitudes regarding minorities, and be familiar with their
own racial consciousness (Helms, 1984).
Wolvin and Coakley (1988) contend Culture is a primary
determinant of all communication behavior (including
listening) because an individuals culture essentially
serves to define who he or she is and how he or she will
communicate through his or her perceptual filter...The
influence of culture is especially prominent when one
attempts to communicate across cultures (p. 121).
Even when one considers all these factors, there are
still questions left unanswered.
For instance, does the
counseling style used make a difference in multicultural
counseling, and in this case interracial counseling?
Parker (1988), expresses that unfortunately, most of our
present counseling theories are based on White middle class
values, and are therefore ethnocentric (p. 137).
Katz (1985) agrees that our current theories mirror
prejudices, of White theorists.
One Black individual
expressed that until recently, having a counselor was a
rich, White fad (Rossi-Barrett, 1992).
Counseling
approaches were developed for the White middle class.
Listening in Counseling
5
Given the various counseling approaches available,
which are most effective with Black clients?
Traditionally,
it has been felt that Black clients are more responsive
to action-oriented therapy, as it could be used to raise
hopes and aspirations (Tucker, 1973).
However, Smith (1977)
feels that to use action-oriented approaches with Black
clients is to stereotype them.
This violates the promise
of counseling--to see clients as individuals first, and
members of a group second.
Listening is an important component in counseling.
Wolvin and Coakley (1992) said that therapeutic listening
is listening to provide a troubled sender with the
opportunity to talk through a problem (p. 277).
Wolvin
and Coakley go on to state that there are five skills
peculiar to therapeutic listening:
(1) focusing attention,
(2) demonstrating attending behaviors, (3) developing a
supportive communication climate, (4) listening with
empathy, and (5) responding appropriately.
Intercultural listening is communication in which
the processes of receiving, attending, and assigning meaning
are influenced by cultural differences (Thomlison, 1991,
p. 89).
Could cultural or ethnic differences make a
difference in perceiving that a counselor is maximizing
therapeutic listening?
Are other characteristics of
c
Listening in Counseling
6
therapeutic listening such as empathy, responding
appropriately, and the perception of other attending
behaviors affected by cultural factors?
This study compares person-centered therapy with
reality therapy.
Since both therapies require the
counselor to respond differently to the client, the goal
was to determine which theory, if either, is seen as more
beneficial with Black clients.
Another specific goal
was to find out if the counselors therapeutic listening
was perceived as more beneficial in either one of the two
counselin7 approaches.
Following is a discussion of both
theories with regards to philosophy, goals, techniques,
applications, contributions, and limitations of
multicultural counseling.
Listening in Counseling
7
Person-centered Therapy
Philosophy This is an existential approach developed
by Carl Rogers.
It holds that all humans have the ability
to become fully functioning. The focus in this case is
on the person, not on the problem.
By increasing selfawareness, clients will be able to better cope with their
problems.
Goals Provides a comfortable environment for clients
to engage in self-exploration. The counselor enables the
client to become more open, willing, and to trust
themselves.
Technique There are few techniques.
The client
assumes responsibility for the direction of therapy.
Tne
counselor is an active listener. The clients statements
are reflected and clarified. The counselor provides
unconditional positive regard, to assist in the
self-exploration process.
Applications Can be used with individuals or groups.
Can be used in family therapy. Applicable for work with
communities, management, human-relations, parent-child
interactions.
Can be used in working with groups from
culturally diverse backgrounds.
Contributions to Multicultural Counseling This therapy
respects clients values, uses active listening, and employs
empathetic conditions.
Cultural differences are welcomed,
therapy is nonjudgemental. This type of therapy has been
used with culturally diverse populations to break down
communication barriers.
Limitations with Multicultural Counseling The lack
of counselor direction may not be appropriate for clients
seeking immediate advice. Some clients may have an
external locus of control, this therapy implies that all
humans have the capacity to help themselves.
Person-centered therapy does not utilize advice giving,
which may be helpful and expected with minorities.
Adapted from Corey, G. (1991).
Listening in Counseling
8
Reality Therapy
Philosophy This theory indicates that individuals
can control their behavior. Follows the idea that if a
person has a success identity, they see themselves as
significant, worthy, and capable of meeting their needs.
It emphasizes responsiblity for behaviors, thoughts, and
feelings.
Goals To assist people in becoming more effective
in meeting their needs.
It encourages clients to evaluate
current behavior and assess how well this behavior meets
their needs.
Techniques Counselors become personally involved
with the client, demonstrating an attitude that promotes
change.
The client explores his/her wants and needs.
Focus is on current behavior. Client evaluates behavior.
When client is ready to change, the counselor and client
plan actions, and the client makes a commitment to carry
them out.
Applications Teaches people to live their lives
Has been used individually with a wide range
effectively.
of clients, as well as in group counseling.
Has also been
used with youthful offenders, and in marriage and family
In some instances it is well suited for brief
therapy.
therapy.
Contributions to Multicultural Counseling The focus
is on the clients evaluation of behavior, which allows
for cultural interpretation. Client can determine how
well their needs are being satisfied. It is possible for
a minority client to ,find a balance between retaining
identity and integrating some of the values of the dominant
society.
Limitations in Multicultural Counseling This theory
This
stresses personal responsibility of ones life.
conflicts with clients who may want to change their external
The counselor needs to be aware of racism
environment.
and prejudice, and be prepared to help the client deal
with them.
Adapted from Corey, G. (1991).
Listening in Counseling
9
Method
Subjects
One-hundred sixty undergraduate students served as
voluntary participants.
From these participants, the
results of only the Black students were used (n = 31).
The subjects ranged in age from 16 to 23 years old.
There
were 21 female, and 10 male participants.
All participants agreed to the informed consent (see
Appendix A).
The participants received extra credit for
participating in the project.
Materials,
Twn 3-minute video tapes were created to be shown
to the participants.
One was based on reality therapy,
the other based on person-centered therapy.
Confederates
were .used to simulate a counseling session between a White
counselor and a Black client.
In order to eliminate
bias, neither confederate was familiar with the counseling
approaches used.
The confederates conducted their session
using scripts created in accordance with the philosophy,
goals, techniques, and applications relevant to the type
of therapy (Corey, 1991).
The clients reason for seeking
counseling remained constant throughout both scenarios,
as did much of the clients dialogue
A feedback form was constructed to measure the
Listening in Counseling
10
participants degree of satisfaction with each scene.
The form consistPd of 15 statements, to which the
participant on a scale from strongly disagree to strongly
agree, with four points in between.
(See Appendix B.)
Before conducting the project, the video tape was
shown to several people not involved in the study to check
for validity and authenticity.
Some of the individuals
were counselor education students.
It was generally agreed
that the videos were consistent with their respective
theories.
It was felt that the clients issue was common.
Procedure
The purpose of the project was explained, and the
informed consent read.
two groups.
The project was conducted with
Each occurred in a lecture hall, where the
video was shown on a large screen in front of the room.
Each group viewed the first segment of the video.
They
were immediately instructed to complete the feedback form,
based on what they had just seen.
They were then shown
the second segment, and instructed to complete an identical
feedback form, based on the second scene.
The order of
the segments was reversed, so the first group saw the
person-centered segment first; the second group viewed
reality therapy first.
All participants were given the
opportunity to ask questions.
Listening in Counseling
11
Results
The results were calculated to determine the mean.
median, and standard deviation of each question for both
questionnaires.
The results are shown in Table 1
(P.person-centered, R.reality).
The overall mean response
for the person-centered therapy was 3.202.
The overall
mean response for the reality therapy was 4.155.
Seven
items were found to show significance at the p 4(.05 level.
These were statements numbers 3,
15.
8,
9, 10, 11, 12, and
An item analysis grid was constructed to compare the
number ofiparticipants who responded for each rating on
the scale for both video segments (see Table 2).
Discussion
The overall purpose of the study was to explore which
therapy was perceived more favorably by Black students.
Based on this investigation of interracial counseling dyads,
reality therapy was viewed as more beneficial by Black
students.
-Black students viewed reality therapy as more
favorable then person-centered on seven of the fifteen
statements, each at the p
.05 level of significance.
-\/
Listening in Counseling
12
Comparison of Number of Persons Responding for Each Rating
Statement
#
P
T
R
P
2
Strongly
Disagree
1
4
1
1
3
1
P
P
P
3
4
5
5
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
Slightly
Disagree
Slightly
Agree
Agree
Strongly
Agree
4
3
10
9
10
10
2
7
7
6
5
1
9
9
5
8
2
6
11
7
9
2
1
10
1
3
5
3
5
5
10
4
9
1
2
1
12
10
1
9
3
5
2
8
10
7
1
12
2
6
6
9
4
4
8
9
7
2
5
1
0
3
4
10
8
6
0
2
3
20
6
7
2
12
7
3
3
5
2
0
2
16
3
2
5
8
8
4
1
0
2
6
18
4
4
4
0
6
4
9
4
7
3
12
9
14
4
7
2
4
2
6
7
7
7
11
6
5
4
4
3
1
2
10
11
4
3
3
5
5
3
4
5
5
7
11
2
3
8
6
5
5
4
3
9
8
4
2
3
1
2
P
Disagree
7
1
2
5
1
2
2
0
2
1
9
5
7
5
7
3
0
10
11
4
4
Counseling in Listening
13
Table 1
Comparison of Mean, Median, and Standard Deviation per Statement
Statement #
Mean
3.968
4.516
Median
4.000
5.000
2
3.387
4.129
4.000
4.000
1.430
1.477
3
2.774
4.452
2.000
5.000
1.334
1.287
4
2.903
4.387
3.000
4.000
1.423
1.202
5
3.452
4.065
4.000
4.000
1.312
1.315
6
2.839
3.129
3.000
3.000
1.393
1.455
7
4.323
4.968
4.000
5.000
1.222
0.752
P
8
2.387
4.323
2.000
5.000
1.145
1.376
.05
P
9
3.613
4.677
4.000
5.000
1.430
1.013
.05
P
10
3.161
3A00
4.000
1.393
1.110
.05
4.032
P
P
1
Std. Dev.
Significance
1.251
1.235
.05
P
11
2.290
3.548
2.090
4.000
1.442
1.387
.05
P
12
2.581
2.000
4.000
1.566
1.400
.05
4.194
P
13
4.161
4.323
5.000
5.000
1.809
1.620
P
14
3.613
3.387
3.000
3.000
1.745
1.726
P
15
2.581
4.194
2.000
4.000
1.385
1.376
.05
Listening in Counseling
1 4
Question #7 which asked participants to rate how
the counselor listened to the client, no significant
difference was found between ths person-centered and reality
approaches.
However, it should be noted that other
variables associated with therapeutic listening showed
statistical significance.
Statement #3 read, The counselor gave good advice
to (Tami) the client.
When viewing the reality tape,
74\% of the students agreed, compared with 29\% when viewing
the person-centered tape.
This finding is not
surprising since advice giving is mol:e common with reality
therapy, and is not as encouraged in person-centered
therapy.
Seventy-seven percent of the subjects agreed that
the therapist helped the client come up with solutions
compared to 21\% when viewing person-centered therapy.
Again, this is a trait common with reality therapy.
Regarding counselor honesty, the counselor in the
reality scene was viewed as honest by 90\% of the
participants, while the counselor in the person-centered
scene was seen as honest by 52\% of the participants.
Statement #10 dealt with the counselor caring what
happened to the client in the video.
Caring and empathy
are counselor characteristi s highly stressed in person-
Listening in Counseling
15
centered therapy.
However, after viewing the
person-centered tape, only 39\% saw the counselor as caring.
In contrast, 74\% of the participants agreed that the
counselor was caring upon viewing.the reality tape.
In analyzing statements 9 and 10, which deal with
caring and honesty, speculations can be made about why
the students responded the way they did.
First, it could
be concluded that the Black students interpreted the
counselors advice and suggestions as symbols of her honesty
and caring.
Although it was not at the p 4.05 significance
level, statement #5 addresses this as well.
Only 52\% of
the participants agreed that the person-centered therapist
understood the clients feelings, but 77\% agreed that the
reality therapist understood her.
This challenges the
person-centered belief that the best way to convey
understanding is through active listening and summarizing
feelings.
Also to be considered is the nature of the clients
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Your paper must be at least two pages in length (not counting the title and reference pages)
The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough
Data collection
Single Subject Chris is a social worker in a geriatric case management program located in a midsize Northeastern town. She has an MSW and is part of a team of case managers that likes to continuously improve on its practice. The team is currently using an
I would start off with Linda on repeating her options for the child and going over what she is feeling with each option. I would want to find out what she is afraid of. I would avoid asking her any “why” questions because I want her to be in the here an
Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psychological research (Comp 2.1) 25.0\% Summarization of the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psych
Identify the type of research used in a chosen study
Compose a 1
Optics
effect relationship becomes more difficult—as the researcher cannot enact total control of another person even in an experimental environment. Social workers serve clients in highly complex real-world environments. Clients often implement recommended inte
I think knowing more about you will allow you to be able to choose the right resources
Be 4 pages in length
soft MB-920 dumps review and documentation and high-quality listing pdf MB-920 braindumps also recommended and approved by Microsoft experts. The practical test
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One thing you will need to do in college is learn how to find and use references. References support your ideas. College-level work must be supported by research. You are expected to do that for this paper. You will research
Elaborate on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study 20.0\% Elaboration on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study is missing. Elaboration on any potenti
3 The first thing I would do in the family’s first session is develop a genogram of the family to get an idea of all the individuals who play a major role in Linda’s life. After establishing where each member is in relation to the family
A Health in All Policies approach
Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. At a minimum
Chen
Read Connecting Communities and Complexity: A Case Study in Creating the Conditions for Transformational Change
Read Reflections on Cultural Humility
Read A Basic Guide to ABCD Community Organizing
Use the bolded black section and sub-section titles below to organize your paper. For each section
Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott
Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident