Abstract

The development and initial validation of a therapist-rated measure of the real relationship in psychotherapy (the Real Relationship Inventory—Therapist Form [RRI-T]) is reported. Using a sample (n = 80) of practicing psychotherapists and on the basis of prior theory, the authors developed a 24-item measure consisting of 2 subscales (Realism and Genuineness) and a total score. This 24-item version and other measures used for validation were completed by 79 additional practicing therapists and 51 counseling graduate students (n = 130). The RRI-T was found to have high reliability and sound initial validity. As theorized, the RRI-T correlated significantly with measures of working alliance, session outcome (depth and smoothness), client intellectual and emotional insight, and client negative transference. Discriminant validity was supported by a nonsignificant relation to social desirability.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)640-649
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Counseling Psychology
Volume52
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Oct 2005

Keywords

  • MENTAL health counseling
  • PSYCHOTHERAPY
  • MENTAL health personnel
  • COLLEGE students
  • SOCIAL desirability
  • MOTIVATION (Psychology)
  • real relationship
  • therapeutic relationship
  • therapist measure
  • validation

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