Skip to main content
Springer Publishing
Site Menu
  • Browse by subjectSubjectsBrowse by subject
    • Medicine
    • Nursing
    • Physician Assistant
    • Behavioral Sciences
    • Health Sciences
  • What we publish
    • Books
    • Journals
    • Reference
  • Information forInformationInformation for
    • Students
    • Educators
    • Institutions
    • Authors
    • Societies
    • Advertisers
  • About
  • Help
  •   0 items You have 0 items in your shopping cart. Click to view details.   My account
Springer Publishing
  My account

Main navigation

Main Navigation

  • Browse by subjectSubjectsBrowse by subject
    • Medicine
    • Nursing
    • Physician Assistant
    • Behavioral Sciences
    • Health Sciences
  • What we publish
    • Books
    • Journals
    • Reference
  • Information forInformationInformation for
    • Students
    • Educators
    • Institutions
    • Authors
    • Societies
    • Advertisers

Secondary Navigation

  •   0 items You have 0 items in your shopping cart. Click to view details.
  • About
  • Help
 filters 

Your search for all content returned 131 results

Include content types...

    • Reference Work 0
    • Quick Reference 0
    • Procedure 0
    • Prescribing Guideline 0
    • Patient Education 0
    • Journals 0
    • Journal Articles 0
    • Clinical Guideline 0
    • Books 22
    • Book Chapters 109

Filter results by...

Filter by keyword

    • Students
    • Counseling 525
    • Mental Health 415
    • EMDR 329
    • Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing 328
    • Social Workers 289
    • intimate partner violence 281
    • Delivery of Health Care 269
    • caring 261
    • Social Work 237
    • Aged 233
    • mental health 230
    • Psychotherapy 225
    • Psychology 212
    • Disabled Persons 201
    • Aging 196
    • Counselors 193
    • Health Personnel 191
    • depression 183
    • eye movement desensitization and reprocessing 183
    • trauma 182
    • Cognitive Therapy 166
    • Rehabilitation 165
    • Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic 163
    • Evidence-Based Practice 160
    • psychotherapy 158
    • social workers 158
    • Substance-Related Disorders 157
    • domestic violence 156
    • posttraumatic stress disorder 155
    • Child 154
    • Family 154
    • Wounds and Injuries 152
    • Caring 150
    • Adolescent 148
    • PTSD 148
    • Cognition 145
    • Nurses 145
    • anxiety 141
    • cognitive behavioral therapy 139
    • counseling 137
    • Emotions 137
    • Mental Disorders 137
    • Students 131
    • older adults 125
    • INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE 121
    • Caregivers 120
    • Depression 119
    • Social Justice 119
    • adolescents 118
    • health care 115
  • Students

Filter by author

    • Degges-White, Suzanne 7
    • WOOD, SUSANNAH M. 6
    • Barclay, Susan R. 5
    • Borzumato-Gainey, Christine 4
    • PETERSON, JEAN SUNDE 4
    • Phipps, Ricardo 4
    • Hermann, Katherine M. 3
    • Hudspeth, Edward F. 3
    • Jaekel, Kathryn S. 3
    • Killam, Wendy K. 3
    • Peterson, Jean Sunde 3
    • Stoltz, Kevin B. 3
    • Wise, Suzanna M. 3
    • Barnett, Marina 2
    • Kauffman, Stephen 2
    • Kooyman, Leslie 2
    • Kortegast, Carrie A. 2
    • Matis, Selina 2
    • Matthews, Kimberly 2
    • Michael, Tony 2
    • Michel, Rebecca E. 2
    • Miller, Mary A. 2
    • Poulin, John 2
    • Turnage-Butterbaugh, Ian S. 2
    • Weber, Bill 2
    • Wirwicz, Deborah C. 2
    • Wood, Susannah M. 2
    • Zavadil, Amy 2
    • Aaron Resch, J. 1
    • Abdi, Beheshteh 1
    • Allen, Amanda Hudson 1
    • Allen, Kimberly 1
    • Alonzo, Dana 1
    • Alvarez, Jenna Marie 1
    • Antonak, Richard F. 1
    • Appel, Tosca 1
    • Atkins, Lauren E. 1
    • Atkins, Sally S. 1
    • Bailey, Carrie Lynn 1
    • BAILEY, CARRIE LYNN 1
    • Baldo, Juliana 1
    • Barrera, Kyrstle 1
    • Bass, Tia-Jane'l 1
    • BECK, MATTHEW J. 1
    • Beck, Matthew J. 1
    • Bell, Stephanie C. 1
    • Benoit, Esther Nicole 1
    • Benz, Michael R. 1
    • Blake, John 1
    • Boisen, Laura A. 1

Filter by book / journal title

    • College Student Mental Health Counseling: A Developmental Approach 19
    • College Student Development: Applying Theory to Practice on the Diverse Campus 17
    • Counseling Gifted Students: A Guide for School Counselors 12
    • Developing Online Learning in the Helping Professions: Online, Blended, and Hybrid Models 11
    • School Consultation for Student Success: A Cognitive-Behavioral Approach 11
    • The Counselor Educator’s Guide: Practical In-Class Strategies and Activities 7
    • The Counseling Practicum And Internship Manual: A Resource For Graduate Counseling Students 6
    • Motivational Interviewing in School: Strategies for Engaging Parents, Teachers, and Students 5
    • Career Counseling Interventions: Practice With Diverse Clients 4
    • Mindfulness and Yoga in Schools: A Guide for Teachers and Practitioners 4
    • School Psychology: Professional Issues and Practices 4
    • Social Work Practice: A Competency-Based Approach 2
    • A Practical Ethics Worktext for Professional Counselors: Applying Decision-Making Models to Case Examples 1
    • Applied Social Research, 10th Edition: A Tool for the Human Services 1
    • Applied Social Research: A Tool for the Human Services 1
    • Career and College Readiness Counseling in P–12 Schools 1
    • Career and College Readiness Counseling in P–12 Schools, 3rd Edition 1
    • Child and Adolescent Counseling Case Studies: Developmental, Relational, Multicultural, and Systemic Perspectives 1
    • Children of Substance-Abusing Parents: Dynamics and Treatment 1
    • Counseling Theories and Techniques for Rehabilitation and Mental Health Professionals 1
    • Expressive Arts Interventions for School Counselors 1
    • Forensic Psychology 101 1
    • Genius 101 1
    • Integrating the Expressive Arts Into Counseling Practice, 2nd Edition: Theory-Based Interventions 1
    • Intelligence 101 1
    • Motivational Interviewing in School, 2nd Edition: Strategies for Engaging Parents, Teachers, and Students 1
    • Psychology of Aging: A Biopsychosocial Perspective 1
    • Service Learning Through Community Engagement: What Community Partners and Members Gain, Lose, and Learn From Campus Collaborations 1
    • Social Work and Mental Health: Evidence-Based Policy and Practice 1
    • Social Work Capstone Projects: Demonstrating Professional Competencies Through Applied Research 1
    • Social Work Leaders Through History: Lives and Lessons 1
    • Solution Focused Narrative Therapy 1
    • Suicide Assessment and Treatment, 2nd Edition: Empirical and Evidence-Based Practices 1
    • The Counseling Practicum And Internship Manual, 3rd Edition: A Resource For Graduate Counseling Students 1
    • The Psychological and Social Impact of Illness and Disability, 7th Edition 1
    • The Psychology of Eating Disorders 1
    • The Social Work Field Instructor’s Survival Guide 1
    • The Social Work Field Placement: A Competency-Based Approach 1
    • The Ultimate School Counselor’s Guide to Assessment & Data Collection 1
    • You CAN Teach ADVANCED Med–Surg Nursing!: The Authoritative Guide and Toolkit for the ADVANCED Medical–Surgical Nursing Clinical Instructor 1
    • You CAN Teach Med-Surg Nursing!: The Authoritative Guide and Toolkit for the Medical–Surgical Nursing Clinical Instructor 1

Filter by subject

    • Undergraduate Nursing
    • Behavioral Sciences
    • Medicine 2
      • Neurology 0
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
      • Oncology 0
        • Medical Oncology 0
        • Radiation Oncology 0
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
      • Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 0
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
      • Other Specialties 0
    • Nursing 116
      • Administration, Management, and Leadership 21
      • Advanced Practice 22
        • Critical Care, Acute Care, and Emergency 1
        • Family and Adult-Gerontology Primary Care 1
        • Pediatrics and Neonatal 0
        • Women's Health, Obstetrics, and Midwifery 0
        • Other 4
      • Clinical Nursing 0
      • Critical Care, Acute Care, and Emergency 1
      • Geriatrics and Gerontology 1
      • Doctor of Nursing Practice 10
      • Nursing Education 84
      • Professional Issues and Trends 45
      • Research, Theory, and Measurement 6
      • Undergraduate Nursing 2
      • Special Topics 1
      • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
    • Physician Assistant 12
    • Behavioral Sciences 129
      • Counseling 99
        • General Counseling 26
        • Marriage and Family Counseling 0
        • Mental Health Counseling 21
        • Rehabilitation Counseling 1
        • School Counseling 57
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
      • Gerontology 0
        • Adult Development and Aging 0
        • Biopsychosocial 0
        • Global and Comparative Aging 0
        • Research 0
        • Service and Program Development 0
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
      • Psychology 65
        • Applied Psychology 1
        • Clinical and Counseling Psychology 3
        • Cognitive, Biological, and Neurological Psychology 2
        • Developmental Psychology 0
        • General Psychology 2
        • School and Educational Psychology 32
        • Social and Personality Psychology 27
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
      • Social Work 29
        • Administration and Management 1
        • Policy, Social Justice, and Human Rights 0
        • Theory, Practice, and Skills 23
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 1
    • Health Sciences 4
      • Health Care Administration and Management 1
      • Public Health 4
  • Undergraduate Nursing
  • Behavioral Sciences
Include options
Please enter years in the form YYYY
  • Save search

Your search for all content returned 131 results

Order by: Relevance | Title | Date
Show 10 | 50 | 100 per page
  • You CAN Teach Med-Surg Nursing! Go to book: You CAN Teach Med-Surg Nursing!

    You CAN Teach Med-Surg Nursing!:
    The Authoritative Guide and Toolkit for the Medical–Surgical Nursing Clinical Instructor

    Book

    This book gives readers all the direction and resources they need to be a confident and competent medical-surgical nursing clinical instructor. It offers insight and examples related to student evaluations, syllabus preparation, and contracts that would typically be used by an adjunct instructor. Week-to-week instruction, along with medication quizzes and student learning activities, helps ensure that students are learning new knowledge and skills on an ongoing basis. A caring plan and medication forms are included, along with medication administration guidelines. The major body systems are addressed, with comprehensive resources included on each one. The increasingly significant topics of delegation and patient teaching are also included. Each clinical week is prepared and sequenced in such as way as to provide the clinical instructor with enough material to teach without redundancy. Each clinical course must meet for a certain number of hours to ensure the student is meeting attendance requirements. When a student misses a clinical class, a makeup assignment should be given to meet the attendance requirement. There are several types of assignments included in the book on makeup assignments. The work assigned for the makeup assignment must be written in American Psychological Association (APA) format and must be thoroughly investigated with reliable evidenced-based references. The assignment should be detailed enough to makeup for the hours missed.

  • Chickering’s Theory and the Seven Vectors of DevelopmentGo to chapter: Chickering’s Theory and the Seven Vectors of Development

    Chickering’s Theory and the Seven Vectors of Development

    Chapter

    Concurrent with the release of Education and Identity in 1969, the United States was at the nexus of social unrest and expanding funding and support for educational initiatives. The decades of the 1950s and 1960s saw a great increase in research and practice focused on developmental theorists working in the area of higher education. At the forefront of this work was theorist Arthur Chickering. The primary construct of Chickering’s (1969) work is the Seven Vectors of Development. The vectors are: (a) developing competence, (b) managing emotions, (c) moving through autonomy toward interdependence, (d) developing mature interpersonal relationships, (e) establishing identity, (f) developing purpose, and (g) developing integrity. This vector addresses competence across three domains: intellectual, physical and manual, and interpersonal. This chapter briefly outlines Chickering’s life work, and ways in which practitioners can apply his theory to their daily interactions with college students.

    Source:
    College Student Development: Applying Theory to Practice on the Diverse Campus
  • Theory as the Language of Student Affairs ProfessionalsGo to chapter: Theory as the Language of Student Affairs Professionals

    Theory as the Language of Student Affairs Professionals

    Chapter

    Traditionally, there has been a division of labor in higher education between academics and student affairs. This chapter is designed to focus on the plausibility of using theory to facilitate communication across the many departments and divisions of higher education. It is important to remember that the student affairs profession “grew from the campus up, not from theory down”. Early institutions of higher education followed the Oxbridge model with historically based residential living systems in which educators resided in residence halls with the students. This concept of faculty–student integration remains a valuable component in student success today, and is discussed in greater detail in this chapter. One useful “language” for student affairs practitioners is found in Erikson’s stages of psychosocial development. Erik Erikson pioneered a theoretical framework and proposes an eight-staged life-span model through which developing individuals permeate starting at birth and eventually ending with death.

    Source:
    College Student Development: Applying Theory to Practice on the Diverse Campus
  • White Identity DevelopmentGo to chapter: White Identity Development

    White Identity Development

    Chapter

    Informal and loosely generated models of White identity development began to emerge in the late 1970s and early 1980s; however, the first formal White identity development model, or typology, was proposed by Helms in 1984. This chapter describes her model, followed by an application of the model to the opening vignette. It identifies strategies for educators and student affairs practitioners to work with students like Craig to begin to more fully understand his Whiteness, the sociopolitical realities of race on campus and, in general, increase his multicultural competence, and engage in healthy interracial interactions. The chapter also discusses the summary of the literature examining the steps educators and student affairs practitioners can take to promote their own cross-cultural interactions and multicultural knowledge in order to more effectively work with students struggling with their own racial identity, followed by the strategies to promote healthy interracial interactions among students.

    Source:
    College Student Development: Applying Theory to Practice on the Diverse Campus
  • Holland’s Theory of Career DevelopmentGo to chapter: Holland’s Theory of Career Development

    Holland’s Theory of Career Development

    Chapter

    Holland theorized six distinct worker personalities (Realistic, Investigative, Artistic, Social, Enterprising, and Conventional). This is often referred to as RIASEC. The theory includes six work environments that correspond to the same personality types (Realistic, Investigative, Artistic, Social, Enterprising, and Conventional). Although people possess aspects of each type, the general thesis of the theory is that salient types (work personalities) will emerge in each individual. Holland’s work represents a significant contribution to career development and counseling. Understanding Holland’s focus on interests as expressions of personality aids career counselors and student development specialists in helping students gain critical self-understanding. Exploring the match between personalities and work environments is a fundamental aspect of applying this theory to student development. Helping students to explore and learn about different careers that may be of interest to them is congruent with the goals of higher education institutions and student development theories.

    Source:
    College Student Development: Applying Theory to Practice on the Diverse Campus
  • Theories of Moral DevelopmentGo to chapter: Theories of Moral Development

    Theories of Moral Development

    Chapter

    Integral to theories of moral development is the matter of not only what individuals think but also how they think. Across the life span, moral development is shaped by challenging events that prompt individuals to question the frameworks they have created for finding ways to determine what is good and what is bad. College students encounter new ideas and values that differ from those of their families, in the classroom, in the residence hall, in the dining facility, in the student union, and sometimes on the athletic field or court. In order to illustrate how moral development unfolds within a college student population, this chapter introduces a fictitious character who displays each stage of moral development for two theories–Lawrence Kohlberg’s (1963, 1984) and Carol Gilligan’s (1982) models of moral development. The chapter discusses the underpinnings of two specific moral development theories.

    Source:
    College Student Development: Applying Theory to Practice on the Diverse Campus
  • Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Systems TheoryGo to chapter: Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Systems Theory

    Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Systems Theory

    Chapter

    Many adults understand the pressures of having multiple responsibilities that require attention in a variety of life circumstances. Whether giving attention to work, friends, school, religious activities, romantic relationships, family, or even recreation, adulthood requires the ongoing ability to multitask a variety of expectations and responsibilities. Before reaching adulthood, each person has experienced influences that affect how we think, feel, and react to life’s circumstances. This chapter offers professionals and educators one model for understanding these influences and their impact on college students who oftentimes are transitioning to a new world of adult responsibilities for the first time. Ecological theory originally developed out of the work of Urie Bronfenbrenner (1977) within the field of developmental psychology. The concepts described in Bronfenbrenner’s ecological theory offer a number of important implications for supporting students in a college setting.

    Source:
    College Student Development: Applying Theory to Practice on the Diverse Campus
  • Other Theories of Minority Identity DevelopmentGo to chapter: Other Theories of Minority Identity Development

    Other Theories of Minority Identity Development

    Chapter

    The general racial/ethnic identity theories offer some insight into possible ways to approach diversity education within all aspects of student affairs. Student affairs professionals and faculty could facilitate educational programs, seminars, and workshops that challenge students to confront issues of prejudice and racism as well as to cultivate racial or ethnic pride. These programs should address the external conditions in which students explore their identity and how to make meaning of shifting thoughts as they progress in their racial or ethnic identity development. By looking at diversity through the lens of racial or ethnic orientation, professionals can meet students where they are and help them not only understand other cultures, but also how they fit into their own race/ethnicity. Practitioners might also use these models as a way to gain insight as to where students might be in their racial/ethnic identity development.

    Source:
    College Student Development: Applying Theory to Practice on the Diverse Campus
  • Kolb’s Theory of Experiential LearningGo to chapter: Kolb’s Theory of Experiential Learning

    Kolb’s Theory of Experiential Learning

    Chapter

    At its core, Kolb’s construct of experiential learning is more than simply a theory. Experiential learning theory (ELT) holds that learning is “the process whereby knowledge is created through the transformation of experience”. Although ELT is often used in formal classroom settings, there are many out-of-classroom environments in student affairs that use and benefit from it as well. One way in which colleges and universities use experiential learning is through service-learning courses and projects. Several scholars have reported that using service learning in conjunction with ELT provides students with meaningful ways to engage not only with the community, but also to come to know more about diversity and social justice. Because out-of-classroom learning is such a key component in higher education and in the holistic development of students, using Kolb’s experiential learning model can aid students in meaning making as it facilitates personal growth.

    Source:
    College Student Development: Applying Theory to Practice on the Diverse Campus
  • Genius 101 Go to book: Genius 101

    Genius 101

    Book

    This book presents the best short introduction to genius to be found. It is a valuable resource for all students of psychology and anyone interested in the field. The book examines the many definitions of “genius”, and the multiple domains in which it appears, including art, science, music, business, literature, and the media. The term genius is peculiar. It can be precisely defined or loosely defined. It can be applied to a diversity of phenomena or confined to just one or two. It all depends on how you use the term. The tremendous range in usage reflects the fact that genius is both a humanistic concept with a long history and a scientific concept with a much shorter history. There are two principal ways to assess degrees of genius. One is historiometric, and the other is psychometric. Whatever the actual association between historiometric and psychometric genius, we have a strong inclination to associate the two concepts. This connection was demonstrated in a recent survey of college students at both U.S. and Canadian universities. The book also examines three alternative positions on the nature of cognitive ability: unified intellect, diverse intellects and hierarchical intellect. Whether intelligence is unified or multiple, all budding geniuses must go through some sort of apprenticeship period in which they acquire the expertise that will enable them to make original and exemplary contributions to their chosen domain of achievement. The book further explains what psychologists have said about problem-solving research in cognitive psychology.

Pagination

  • Current page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Next page ››
  • Last page Last »
Show 10 | 50 | 100 per page
  • Springer Publishing Company

Our content

  • Books
  • Journals
  • Reference

Information for

  • Students
  • Educators
  • Institutions
  • Authors
  • Societies
  • Advertisers

Company info

  • About
  • Help
  • Permissions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use

© 2022 Springer Publishing Company

Loading