1969
DOI: 10.1037/h0028469
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Self-concept therapy for adolescent females.

Abstract: Fourteen adolescent females referred for delinquent and acting-out behaviors were compared pre-and posttreatment on measures of self-concept, ideal selfconcept, and anxiety. These Ss were exposed to a 10-wk. socialization program designed to produce positive changes in self-concept; however, 9 Ss were in a group run by community volunteers while 5 5s were in a group run by mental health professionals. Self-concept changes in a nonreferred comparison group of 8 nondeliquent 5s appeared nearly random in contrast… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…The conclusion is that deviation from social desirability is itself "pathology," and it is an idea which has been expressed elsewhere (e.g., Heilbrun, 1964). In further support of this conclusion is the clinical truism that poor self-concepts are characteristic of disturbed individuals (e.g., Cole, Getting, & Miskimins, 1969). In summary, social desirability was present in the data testing Figure 1 but not usually in an artifactual sense.…”
Section: Social Desirability Ratingsmentioning
confidence: 60%
“…The conclusion is that deviation from social desirability is itself "pathology," and it is an idea which has been expressed elsewhere (e.g., Heilbrun, 1964). In further support of this conclusion is the clinical truism that poor self-concepts are characteristic of disturbed individuals (e.g., Cole, Getting, & Miskimins, 1969). In summary, social desirability was present in the data testing Figure 1 but not usually in an artifactual sense.…”
Section: Social Desirability Ratingsmentioning
confidence: 60%
“…The strongest evidence for paraprofessionals' effectiveness derives from studies of college students and adults with specific target problems (Group 4 studies) and moderately to severely disturbed non-middle-class adults (Group 1 studies). Work with adolescents is represented by a single study (Cole, Getting, & Miskimins, 1969). Interventions with younger children concentrating on specific target behaviors have not been well controlled (De Leon & Mandell, 1966;Schortinghuis & Frohman, 1974;Werry & Cohrssen, 1965) and there has only been one study focusing on children's general adjustment difficulties (Karlsruher, 1976).…”
Section: Patient Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The heart of the issue is whether social desirability responding represents a contamination, a source of unwanted systematic bias, or whether it is intrinsic to what one is actually intending to measure and therefore ought not to be arbitrarily eliminated. Citing the work of Heilbrun (1964) and that of Cole, Getting, and Miskimins (1969), Benjamin (1974) suggested that "deviation from social desirability may itself be 'pathology' " (p. 423). Benjamin (1977, p. 405) took pains to distinguish between social desirability as an artifact and as clinically meaningful defensiveness and to relate this distinction to the settings in which the SASB model is used.…”
Section: Reliability and Related Mattersmentioning
confidence: 99%