Helping Skills Training for Undergraduate Students: Who Should We Select and Train?

We examined the effectiveness of the Hill model of helping skills training for 191 undergraduate students in six sections of a semester-long course. Students completed self-report, performance, and nonverbal measures at the beginning; they conducted one 20-min helping session at the beginning and an...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Counseling psychologist 2016-01, Vol.44 (1), p.50-77
Hauptverfasser: Hill, Clara E., Anderson, Timothy, Kline, Kathryn, McClintock, Andrew, Cranston, Saryn, McCarrick, Shannon, Petrarca, Allison, Himawan, Lina, Pérez-Rojas, Andrés E., Bhatia, Avantika, Gupta, Shudarshana, Gregor, Margo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We examined the effectiveness of the Hill model of helping skills training for 191 undergraduate students in six sections of a semester-long course. Students completed self-report, performance, and nonverbal measures at the beginning; they conducted one 20-min helping session at the beginning and another toward the end of the semester; and they completed self-efficacy measures at the end of the semester. Students’ helping skills improved over the course of the semester, as evidenced by higher helper- and volunteer client–rated session quality, reduced proportion of words spoken in sessions, increased proportion of exploration skills used in sessions, and increased self-efficacy for using helping skills. Self-reported empathy predicted four of the five helping skills criteria at the beginning-of-semester assessment. Facilitative interpersonal skills predicted end-of-semester self-efficacy in helping skills when controlling for retrospective prelevels and instructor effects. Implications for training and research are presented.
ISSN:0011-0000
1552-3861
DOI:10.1177/0011000015613142