The Teaching Alliance Inventory: Evaluating the student-instructor relationship in clinical and counselling psychology training |
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Authors: | Rebecca A. Jones Hamid Mirsalimi Jennifer S. Conroy H. Lynn Horne-Moyer Cecelia Burrill |
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Affiliation: | 1. Georgia School of Professional Psychology, Argosy University , Atlanta, Georgia;2. Dixon Correctional Center , Dixon, IL;3. Medaille College , Buffalo, New York;4. Argosy University/Hawaii , Honolulu, Hawaii, USA |
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Abstract: | The Teaching Alliance Inventory (TAI) was developed to measure the quality of the student-instructor relationship in graduate clinical and counselling psychology classrooms. Based on Bordin's (1983) original concept of the alliance as fundamental to the change process in psychotherapy, we developed the TAI to measure aspects of the classroom relationship that may be fundamental to learning essential skills of counselling and clinical psychology. Factor analysis revealed six subscales, four representing interpersonal variables not evaluated in traditional teaching effectiveness measures. We demonstrated internal consistency and split-half reliability with a large sample of graduate students and described evidence for the scale's face validity and content validity. Construct validity was supported by significant correlations between the TAI and its subscales with an established measure of teaching effectives and its logically related subscales (SEEQ; Marsh, 1987 Marsh, HW. 1987. Students’ evaluations of university teaching: Research findings, methodological issues, and directions for future research. International Journal of Educational Research, 11(Whole Issue 3): 253–288. [Google Scholar]). The TAI may supplement traditional assessments of instructor quality by providing feedback regarding interpersonal impact in the classroom. |
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Keywords: | Teaching Alliance Inventory student-instructor relationship clinical psychology training counselling psychology training |
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