|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
The revised and expanded third edition of the Manual for Clinical
Psychology Trainees is directed primarily to graduate psychology
students - although it will prove valuable for everyone involved in
patient care. This book presents easily understood, brief
guidelines for each step in the provision of psychological
services. The authors do not attempt to document every possible
approach to every potential issue; instead, their goal is to clear
a path through a complex and multilayered field. By targeting the
discussion in this way, the format allows for the provision of
actual methods that work, thus enabling the newcomer to accomplish
a variety of clinical tasks. Plentiful examples of the interviews,
reports, and records that the practitioner is called upon to
conduct or compile are included throughout the text. In addition,
there are extensive tables detailing various syndromes, as well as
tests and classes of medication.
First published in 1996. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
The Rorschach is perhaps the most famous psychological instrument
of all time, yet its purpose and utility are often misunderstood.
In this introductory guide, authors James Choca and Edward Rossini
demonstrate the Rorschach's value to modern psychology as an
essential clinical tool for assessing clients' thought processes.
Choca and Rossini translate their expertise into fundamental
strategies for administering, scoring, and interpreting the test,
as well as writing reports. They carefully examine the Rorschach's
many variables - both individually and in combination with one
another - offering possible interpretations for various scores. In
addition to surveying the two primary Rorschach scoring systems -
the Comprehensive System and the Rorschach Performance Assessment
System - the authors propose their own innovative system, the Basic
Rorschach, which streamlines the assessment process by analyzing
only the most clinically meaningful variables. A versatile,
four-step framework bolstered by advanced interpretation strategies
helps clinicians look beyond a client's scores to more deeply
understand the person behind them. The authors also propose a
shorter, four-card Rorschach test that is more accessible in some
situations, yet still clinically valid.
|
|