Rehberlik ve Psikolojik Danışmanlık Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11779/1934
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Article Citation - WoS: 1Citation - Scopus: 4All You Fear Is Love: the Roles of Rejection by Intimate Others(Wiley, 2023) Aracı-İyiaydın, Ayşegül; Toplu-Demirtaş, Ezgi; Rohner, Ronald P. P.; Akçabozan-Kayabol, Nazlı BüşraInterpersonal acceptance-rejection theory (IPARTheory) asserts that recollections of parental rejection in childhood tend to result in psychological maladjustment and intimacy problems in later romantic relationships. Informed by IPARTheory, we investigated the association between maternal & paternal rejection, and fear of intimacy by the mediating role of psychological maladjustment in a Turkish sample with 462 mostly young adults. We further explored the moderator role of gender in Model 1 and the moderating roles of both gender and intimate partner rejection in Model 2. Model 1 revealed that adults who had experienced maternal and paternal rejection in childhood tended to be psychologically maladjusted. Consequently, they also tended to have a fear of intimacy, regardless of gender. Model 2 revealed that women who recall having been rejected in childhood by their mothers tended to be psychologically maladjusted and to have a significant fear of intimacy when they also experienced moderate or more than moderate intimate-partner rejection. However, both women and men who experienced paternal rejection in childhood tended to be psychologically maladjusted and to experience a greater fear of intimacy when they perceived any degree of intimate partner rejection. Implications of the results for theory, research, and practice are discussed.Article Citation - WoS: 4Citation - Scopus: 5What Goes Around Comes Around: the Loop of Physical Teen Dating Violence Perpetration Among Turkish Adolescents(Wiley, 2021) Aracı-İyiaydın, Ayşegül; Toplu-Demirtaş, Ezgi; Iyiaydin, Aysegul AraciCompared to Western literature, little is known about teen dating violence perpetration (DVP) in Turkey. One risk factor of physical teen DVP may lie within teens' witnessing interparental physical violence perpetration and subsequent accepting attitudes toward physical partner violence as a risk factor. Informed by the intergenerational transmission (IGT) of violence theory, we investigated attitudes toward physical partner violence as a likely mechanism that might account for the association between witnessing interparental physical violence perpetration and physical teen DVP. In a sample of 242 Turkish teens, the prevalence of teen DVP was 32.0% for females and 28.4% for males, with no significant gender difference. The results of the moderated mediation analyses confirmed the hypothesized model for men only. IGT of violence theory offers good guidance in understanding the etiology of physical teen DVP. For prevention practices, accepting attitudes toward physical partner violence seems a hurdle that needs to be breached.Article Citation - WoS: 1Citation - Scopus: 1Turkish Teachers' Social Judgements on Autism Spectrum-Based Exclusion in Primary Schools(Wiley, 2020) Acar, MelikeInclusive education has become a primary educational goal in many countries that aim to end the exclusion of students with different needs. However, we still know little about the perspectives of teachers regarding the exclusion of students with different needs. Given that background, the present study used semi‐structured clinical interviews to investigate Turkish pre‐service (N = 31, mean age = 20.02 years) and in‐service (N = 23, mean age = 40.88 years) teachers' judgements and justifications related to peer exclusion of students with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and teachers' failure to include. Findings revealed that the context of exclusion has a significant effect on whether the teachers judged typically developing students' exclusion of their peers with ASD as acceptable. Teachers evaluated peer exclusion in the academic context as less acceptable than exclusion in the play context, citing more moral concerns. Further findings and implications for teacher education are discussed.Review Citation - WoS: 8Citation - Scopus: 10Systematic Review of the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test(Wiley, 2018) Minnich, Amelia; Bardhoshi, Gerta; Atalay, Zümra; Erford, Bradley T.The psychometric properties of the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test (MAST), a commonly used self report screening instrument for symptom identification of problematic drinking and alcoholism, were explored. A total of 103 studies meeting inclusion criteria were reviewed and analyzed. Results for reliability, validity, and nonclinical descriptive statistics for the MAST are reported. The authors discuss implications for counseling practice and research.Article Citation - WoS: 13Citation - Scopus: 12Systematic Evaluation of Psychometric Characteristics of the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test 13-Item Short (smast) and 10-Item Brief (bmast) Versions(Wiley, 2019) Atalay, Zümra; Erford, Bradley T; Minnich, Amelia; Chang, Catharine Y; Bardhoshi, Gerta; Muller, Lauren AThe psychometric properties of the Michigan Alcohol Screening Test (MAST) 13-item short (SMAST) and 10-item brief (BMAST) versions were aggregated and synthesized across 40 and 21 studies, respectively. Results for reliability, validity, and nonclinical descriptive statistics were reported separately for the SMAST and BMAST, and implications for counseling practice and research were discussed.
