Graduate Students' Approaches to Ethical Dilemmas in Multicultural Counselling
Date
2015-09-04
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Abstract
The current study explored how graduate students approached ethical dilemmas in multicultural counselling, including what the dilemmas were, what helped and hindered them in their approaches, and what resources they wished they had at the time of their approach. Twenty participant responses were analyzed through the use of the Critical Incident Technique. Results indicated that participants encountered ethical dilemmas arising from a lack of power, others’ lack of competency, an interference of personal values and a lack of knowledge, and conflicts between ethical standards. Consultation with colleagues and authority figures, personal experiences, and coursework assisted participants in their approaches. Personal experiences, and conflicts of values, opinion, and power served as hindrances. Finally, participants wished they had profession-specific knowledge and support, and culture/issue specific knowledge at the time of their approach. The results have implications for counselling and for future research to support multi-cultural competence in graduate education.
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Educational Psychology
Citation
Premji, F. (2015). Graduate Students' Approaches to Ethical Dilemmas in Multicultural Counselling (Master's thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca. doi:10.11575/PRISM/26317