Publication | Closed Access
Helping Skills Training for Undergraduate Students
42
Citations
44
References
2015
Year
Training SystemEducational PsychologyEducationSkills CriteriaLearning-by-doingTeaching MethodSocial SciencesPsychologySelf-efficacy TheoryStudent LearningLearning PsychologyCoachingHelping RelationshipHill ModelTutor TrainingSocial SkillsStudent SuccessExploration SkillsInstructional ProgramInstructionSkills TrainingSocial Skill TrainingInstructional CommunicationCounselor Education
We examined the effectiveness of the Hill model of helping skills training for 191 undergraduate students in six sections of a semester-long course. Students completed self-report, performance, and nonverbal measures at the beginning; they conducted one 20-min helping session at the beginning and another toward the end of the semester; and they completed self-efficacy measures at the end of the semester. Students’ helping skills improved over the course of the semester, as evidenced by higher helper- and volunteer client–rated session quality, reduced proportion of words spoken in sessions, increased proportion of exploration skills used in sessions, and increased self-efficacy for using helping skills. Self-reported empathy predicted four of the five helping skills criteria at the beginning-of-semester assessment. Facilitative interpersonal skills predicted end-of-semester self-efficacy in helping skills when controlling for retrospective prelevels and instructor effects. Implications for training and research are presented.
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