Coping strategies of counselling professionals
This research seeks to inquire into the various strategies adopted by Singaporean counselling professionals in coping with occupational stress. The focus is on determining whether these coping strategies vary with age, gender, ethnicity, years of professional experience, different organisation types...
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2008
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-140382020-11-01T06:15:30Z Coping strategies of counselling professionals Ho, Molly. Ong, Ai Choo National Institute of Education DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Applied psychology This research seeks to inquire into the various strategies adopted by Singaporean counselling professionals in coping with occupational stress. The focus is on determining whether these coping strategies vary with age, gender, ethnicity, years of professional experience, different organisation types and stressors. To provide a range of different counselling-organisation cultures, private and government organisations (agencies/centres, clinics and schools) were selected for this research. A questionnaire, the Occupational Stress Coping Scale, was designed to identify the coping strategies and the type of organisational stressors that counselling professionals experienced. Findings showed that counselling professionals appear to cope using problem-focused and non-productive strategies. Age appears to be a significant factor in the choice of coping strategies. Gender and organisation stressors are contributing factors. Implications of the study as well as recommendations for future research were also discussed. Master of Arts (Applied Psychology) 2008-10-20T11:17:12Z 2008-10-20T11:17:12Z 2000 2000 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14038 Nanyang Technological University application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Applied psychology Ho, Molly. Coping strategies of counselling professionals |
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This research seeks to inquire into the various strategies adopted by Singaporean counselling professionals in coping with occupational stress. The focus is on determining whether these coping strategies vary with age, gender, ethnicity, years of professional experience, different organisation types and stressors. To provide a range of different counselling-organisation cultures, private and government organisations (agencies/centres, clinics and schools) were selected for this research. A questionnaire, the Occupational Stress Coping Scale, was designed to identify the coping strategies and the type of organisational stressors that counselling professionals experienced. Findings showed that counselling professionals appear to cope using problem-focused and non-productive strategies. Age appears to be a significant factor in the choice of coping strategies. Gender and organisation stressors are contributing factors. Implications of the study as well as recommendations for future research were also discussed. |
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Ong, Ai Choo |
author_facet |
Ong, Ai Choo Ho, Molly. |
format |
Theses and Dissertations |
author |
Ho, Molly. |
author_sort |
Ho, Molly. |
title |
Coping strategies of counselling professionals |
title_short |
Coping strategies of counselling professionals |
title_full |
Coping strategies of counselling professionals |
title_fullStr |
Coping strategies of counselling professionals |
title_full_unstemmed |
Coping strategies of counselling professionals |
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coping strategies of counselling professionals |
publishDate |
2008 |
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http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14038 |
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1683493535842566144 |