Thanks Miguel. I will make up my own pie chart and reference it properly in my ppt slide. This is MUCH better than telling students that psychodynamic therapy predominates. Although I am puzzled why it takes such a large percentage of the pie? Is that there are still very many older therapists around, or is this truly a popular approach. The article, as it appears when I click the link, apparently is not the source of this graph, so I don't know how the data were collected.
Now, I do understand that modern, relatively short=term psychodynamic approaches are not the same things a taditional psychoanalysis of Freud. But your stats are for clinical and counseling *psychologists* only so I am a bit surprised still. Annette Annette Kujawski Taylor, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology University of San Diego 5998 Alcala Park San Diego, CA 92110 619-260-4006 [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---- Original message ---- >Date: Sat, 8 Dec 2007 09:00:20 -0500 >From: "Miguel Roig" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Subject: RE: [tips] psychotherapy distribution >To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)" <[email protected]> > >Annette, my pie chart is outdated also, but this table may be helpful: >http://www.psichi.org/images/site_pages/5_1_norcross_tab1.jpg. > >Actually, the article itself, >http://www.psichi.org/pubs/articles/article_73.asp >should be of much interest to those considering psychology as a major. > >Miguel > > >On Fri, 7 Dec 2007, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >Does anyone have a recent distribution and source for how popular each >major therapeutic perspective is? How would data like that be collected >and how valid is it? Does anyone have a source? > > > >--- ---
