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The Therapeutic Alliance: How Clients Categorize Client-Identified Helpful Factors

This study examined the client's perspective of the therapeutic alliance using written
statements collected from clients in a previous study (Bedi & Duff, 2008). The 125
statements describe factors clients believe to be fundamental in the development of a
strong alliance with their counsellor. Fifty participants sorted the statements into
thematically similar piles and then gave each pile of statements a title. Multivariate
concept mapping statistical methods (The Concept Systems, 2008, Version 4) were used
to obtain the most representative sort across participants. The resulting 14 categories and
associated ratings for helpfulness (on the scale of 1-5) are represented on scaled Concept
Maps. Category titles selected arc: Emotional Support, Ability to Relate, Sharing the
Counsellor's Personal Experience, Good Boundaries, Interpersonal Demeanour, Body
Language, Provided Resources and Homework, Availability, Planning and Approach,
Directed Process Appropriately, Attentiveness, Approachable, Non-Judgemental, and
Effective Listening. Female and male helpfulness evaluations were not statistically
significantly different. / Graduate / 0621

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uvic.ca/oai:dspace.library.uvic.ca:1828/5027
Date13 November 2013
CreatorsSimpson, Arlene Joyce
ContributorsBlack, Timothy G., Bedi, Robinder P.
Source SetsUniversity of Victoria
LanguageEnglish, English
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
RightsAvailable to the World Wide Web

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