12 books found
An Integrative Approach to Counseling: Bridging Chinese Thought, Evolutionary Theory, and Stress Management offers a global and integrative approach to counseling that incorporates multiple concepts and techniques from both eastern and western perspectives. The book identifies commonalities rather than the differences between them. The book also compares and contrasts the underlying cultural assumptions of western counseling with those of the Chinese perspectives of Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism, relative to integrating and applying a more global approach to helping individuals functionally adapt to challenges in their environments. The book will be used by faculty and students in those advanced undergraduate and graduate courses in psychology, counseling, or social work that cover such areas as introduction to counseling, counseling skills and techniques, counseling theories, multi-cultural awareness and counseling, and stress management.
by Benjamin Franklyn Kaupp, Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station, Robert E. Trimble, Walter George Sackett, William Parker Headden
1912
by United States. National Bureau of Standards, Robert N. Goldberg
1977
by Benjamin Franklyn Kaupp, George Edwin Morton, Louis George Carpenter, Philo Kneeland Blinn, Robert E. Trimble, Walter George Sackett, William Parker Headden
1911
A biography of Lieutenant General Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson, who fought for the Confederacy during the U.S. Civil War.
This volume utilizes various neurological diseases as its organizing principle, focusing specifically on their personal, social, and cognitive consequences. In so doing, it provides neuropsychologists, clinical psychologists, and those in related disciplines with an accessible survey of the available research on the psychological functioning of patients with the various disorders. Each chapter consists of a background review of the major features of one of the diseases, including symptom pattern, neuroanatomical bases, neuropathology, genetic factors, and epidemiology. Finally, the psychological and cognitive deficits established by research are reviewed, and their practical implications are discussed.
by Robert T. Carter, Alex L. Pieterse
2020 · Columbia University Press
A large body of research has established a causal relationship between experiences of racial discrimination and adverse effects on mental and physical health. In Measuring the Effects of Racism, Robert T. Carter and Alex L. Pieterse offer a manual for mental health professionals on how to understand, assess, and treat the effects of racism as a psychological injury. Carter and Pieterse provide guidance on how to recognize the psychological effects of racism and racial discrimination. They propose an approach to understanding racism that connects particular experiences and incidents with a person’s individual psychological and emotional response. They detail how to evaluate the specific effects of race-based encounters that produce psychological distress and possibly impairment or trauma. Carter and Pieterse outline therapeutic interventions for use with individuals and groups who have experienced racial trauma, and they draw attention to the importance of racial awareness for practitioners. The book features a racial-trauma assessment toolkit, including a race-based traumatic-stress symptoms scale and interview schedule. Useful for both scholars and practitioners, including social workers, educators, and counselors, Measuring the Effects of Racism offers a new framework of race-based traumatic stress that helps legitimize psychological reactions to experiences of racism.
by Burton Orange Longyear, Charles Iseard Bray, Earnest A. Lungren, Erwin Louis LeClerg, Herbert Christian Hanson, John Lindemuth Hoerner, Lawrence Wood Durrell, Ralph Leroy Parshall, Robert E. Trimble, Clarence Preston Gillette
1928
A generation before Vietnam, the war for Korea raged. It was as rough and dirty a war as has ever been fought—a war small in history, but very large to the men who waged it. . . . In the Korean War, one group above all others distinguished itself, a small elite band who volunteered for action behind enemy lines. They were the men of the U. S. Army’s legendary Rangers. They succeeded in making the first combat jump in Ranger history, destroying enemy headquarters, and inflicting the first defeat on Communist Chinese forces while suffering a disproportionate number of casualties. This is their story, told here for the first time—based on military records, interviews with survivors, and the author’s personal experiences as an American Ranger in the Korean War.
by Alvin Kezer, Burton Orange Longyear, Charles Richardson Jones, Edward Bishop House, Emil Peter Sandsten, George Henry Glover, H. E. Vasey, J. J. Gardner, Robert E. Trimble, Rupert Alonzo McGinty, Victor Mann Cone, Wilfred William Robbins, William Parker Headden, Isaac Ernest Newsom, Breeze Boyack, George E. Egginton
1917