A Follow-Up of Undergraduate Students Five Years After Helping Skills Training

In a 5-year follow-up assessment, 33 students who had taken an undergraduate helping skills course indicated that they had continued to use the helping skills in both their professional lives and personal relationships. On average, there were no significant changes from pretraining to follow-up on e...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of counseling psychology 2020-11, Vol.67 (6), p.697-705
Hauptverfasser: Hill, Clara E, Anderson, Timothy, Gerstenblith, Judith A, Kline, Kathryn V, Gooch, Caroline V, Melnick, Anna
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container_end_page 705
container_issue 6
container_start_page 697
container_title Journal of counseling psychology
container_volume 67
creator Hill, Clara E
Anderson, Timothy
Gerstenblith, Judith A
Kline, Kathryn V
Gooch, Caroline V
Melnick, Anna
description In a 5-year follow-up assessment, 33 students who had taken an undergraduate helping skills course indicated that they had continued to use the helping skills in both their professional lives and personal relationships. On average, there were no significant changes from pretraining to follow-up on empathy, natural helping ability, or facilitative interpersonal skills. Furthermore, although students had increased in self-efficacy for using the skills during training, on average they maintained their self-efficacy levels at the follow-up. The 15 participants who had further mental health education, however, scored higher at follow-up on empathy, natural helping ability, self-efficacy for using the skills, and facilitative interpersonal skills compared with the 18 participants who had no further mental health education (controlling for pretraining levels), suggesting that continued exposure to and practice using the skills helped them continue to improve their helping abilities. Qualitative data indicated that participants typically had positive experiences in the helping skills course. Implications for training and research are provided. Public Significance Statement Participants reported that they used the helping skills in both their professional and personal lives 5 years after training, suggesting that the effects of helping skills training extend over time. Furthermore, those who pursued further mental health education continued to improve in their helping abilities more than did those who did not continue further mental health education.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/cou0000428
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Public Significance Statement Participants reported that they used the helping skills in both their professional and personal lives 5 years after training, suggesting that the effects of helping skills training extend over time. 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source MEDLINE; APA PsycARTICLES; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Ability
Assistance (Social Behavior)
College Students
Education
Empathy
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Health education
Helping Behavior
Higher Education
Human
Humans
Interpersonal Competence
Interpersonal relations
Interpersonal Relationship
Male
Mental Health
Pretraining
Self Efficacy
Skill development
Skill Learning
Social Skills
Soft skills
Students - psychology
Test Construction
Training
Undergraduate students
Young Adult
title A Follow-Up of Undergraduate Students Five Years After Helping Skills Training
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