An explanatory mixed method explores the relationships among unethical supervision, supervisory rupture, and repair in supervisory relationships. In a quantitative study, supervisees identify the types of unethical supervision and assess them using new and existing relevant scales. Among the quantitative research participants, the supervisees who experienced supervisory rupture and its ensuing repair due to unethical supervision provide a lived experience in the following qualitative study.
Mixed methods research (MMR) is increasingly used in counseling, yet confusion persists about what qualifies as a true MMR study. Adding an open-ended question to a survey is not mixed methods—integration is the defining feature. This poster clarifies the distinction between MMR and multi-method designs, walks attendees through three core designs (explanatory sequential, exploratory sequential, and convergent), and uses side-by-side examples to illustrate what integration looks like in practice
This session presents pilot findings on a brief microteach intervention designed to increase play therapy trainees’ self-efficacy in working with suicidal children. Results showed significant gains in confidence across key skills. Attendees will learn how to integrate short, developmentally responsive training strategies into coursework to better prepare students for working with suicidality.
This session examines the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) through Rasch modeling approaches. Guided by evidence from confirmatory factor analysis and Rasch dimensionality analyses, the study compares unidimensional and multidimensional rating scale and partial credit models. Attendees will learn how Rasch methods can be used to evaluate dimensionality and item functioning, thereby strengthening the interpretation of CES-D scores.
This poster presents the National College Health Assessment (NCHA) as an accessible, large-scale dataset for counseling research and shows how latent class analysis (LCA) can be applied to mental health disparity study. Based on the data (analytic N = 93,274), it illustrates the LCA process and visual outputs (e.g., model comparison tables, classification plots). Attendees will gain practical insights into LCA decision-making for uncovering subgroup heterogeneity in counseling-relevant data.
International counseling trainees (ICTs) are an increasingly visible presence in U.S. counseling psychology and counselor education programs, yet they encounter unique challenges related to language, acculturation, supervision dynamics, and clinical training requirements. This session presents findings from a scoping review that maps the current literature on ICTs’ supervision and training experiences, highlighting key themes, barriers, and promising supervisory practices.