The Incremental Effects of Ethnically Matched Animated Agents in Restructuring the Irrational Career Beliefs of Rural Caucasian Young Women

abstract: The Believe It! program developed and evaluated by Kovalski & Horan (1999) was the first interactive, multimedia, psychological-education intervention deployed on the Internet. In a controlled study, the authors reported that the ethnically diverse cartoon models were partially success...

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Other Authors: Hacker, Robyn L. (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25161
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-251612018-06-22T03:05:15Z The Incremental Effects of Ethnically Matched Animated Agents in Restructuring the Irrational Career Beliefs of Rural Caucasian Young Women abstract: The Believe It! program developed and evaluated by Kovalski & Horan (1999) was the first interactive, multimedia, psychological-education intervention deployed on the Internet. In a controlled study, the authors reported that the ethnically diverse cartoon models were partially successful in using cognitive restructuring to promote more reasonable career beliefs among Caucasian middle-school young women. It was not clear if the program's lack of efficacy among minority young women was due to computer literacy factors affected by SES. Subsequently, three studies explored the role of matching or mismatching the ethnicity of animated agents in a graphically enhanced program with that of the young women receiving the cognitive restructuring treatment. Each of the studies used the same four outcome measures (Occupational Sex-Role Questionnaire, Believe It Measure, Career Beliefs Inventory, and the Career Myths Scale) before and after matched and mismatched participants received the Believe It! intervention. Webster (2010) analyzed data from African-American participants, Hardy (2011) Latinas, and Zhang (2013) Asian-Americans. The current study examined the matching hypothesis on a sample of ethnically isolated Caucasian young women in a rural setting. The results obtained in the three previous studies are consistent with similar research involving client and counselor dyads (e.g., Cabral & Smith, 2011). The Believe It! program had a clear impact on ethnically matched African-American young women, whereas pairings on ethnicity did not improve outcomes for either Latinas or Asian-Americans. A solitary effect on the Occupation Sex-Role Questionnaire in the current study suggests the hypothesis is worthy of further study. Dissertation/Thesis Hacker, Robyn L. (Author) Horan, John J (Advisor) Atkinson, Robert (Committee member) Homer, Judith (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Counseling psychology Believe It! cognitive restructuring ethnically isolated internet intervention irrational career beliefs rural eng 31 pages M.A. Counseling Psychology 2014 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25161 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Counseling psychology
Believe It!
cognitive restructuring
ethnically isolated
internet intervention
irrational career beliefs
rural
spellingShingle Counseling psychology
Believe It!
cognitive restructuring
ethnically isolated
internet intervention
irrational career beliefs
rural
The Incremental Effects of Ethnically Matched Animated Agents in Restructuring the Irrational Career Beliefs of Rural Caucasian Young Women
description abstract: The Believe It! program developed and evaluated by Kovalski & Horan (1999) was the first interactive, multimedia, psychological-education intervention deployed on the Internet. In a controlled study, the authors reported that the ethnically diverse cartoon models were partially successful in using cognitive restructuring to promote more reasonable career beliefs among Caucasian middle-school young women. It was not clear if the program's lack of efficacy among minority young women was due to computer literacy factors affected by SES. Subsequently, three studies explored the role of matching or mismatching the ethnicity of animated agents in a graphically enhanced program with that of the young women receiving the cognitive restructuring treatment. Each of the studies used the same four outcome measures (Occupational Sex-Role Questionnaire, Believe It Measure, Career Beliefs Inventory, and the Career Myths Scale) before and after matched and mismatched participants received the Believe It! intervention. Webster (2010) analyzed data from African-American participants, Hardy (2011) Latinas, and Zhang (2013) Asian-Americans. The current study examined the matching hypothesis on a sample of ethnically isolated Caucasian young women in a rural setting. The results obtained in the three previous studies are consistent with similar research involving client and counselor dyads (e.g., Cabral & Smith, 2011). The Believe It! program had a clear impact on ethnically matched African-American young women, whereas pairings on ethnicity did not improve outcomes for either Latinas or Asian-Americans. A solitary effect on the Occupation Sex-Role Questionnaire in the current study suggests the hypothesis is worthy of further study. === Dissertation/Thesis === M.A. Counseling Psychology 2014
author2 Hacker, Robyn L. (Author)
author_facet Hacker, Robyn L. (Author)
title The Incremental Effects of Ethnically Matched Animated Agents in Restructuring the Irrational Career Beliefs of Rural Caucasian Young Women
title_short The Incremental Effects of Ethnically Matched Animated Agents in Restructuring the Irrational Career Beliefs of Rural Caucasian Young Women
title_full The Incremental Effects of Ethnically Matched Animated Agents in Restructuring the Irrational Career Beliefs of Rural Caucasian Young Women
title_fullStr The Incremental Effects of Ethnically Matched Animated Agents in Restructuring the Irrational Career Beliefs of Rural Caucasian Young Women
title_full_unstemmed The Incremental Effects of Ethnically Matched Animated Agents in Restructuring the Irrational Career Beliefs of Rural Caucasian Young Women
title_sort incremental effects of ethnically matched animated agents in restructuring the irrational career beliefs of rural caucasian young women
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25161
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