J. B. Rotter, “Generated Expectancies for Internal versus External Control of Reinforcement,”Psychological Monographs, 80 (1966), 1–28.
2.
G.S. Felton and B. E. Biggs, “Group Psychotherapy as a Method of Teaching Internalization Behavior to Black Collegiate Low Achievers,”Comparative Group Studies (in press); G. S. Felton and B. E. Biggs, “Teaching Internalization Behavior to Collegiate Low Achievers in Group Psychotherapy,”Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, and Practice, 9 (1972), 281–283; G. S. Felton and L. J. Thomas, “How to Beat the Failure Syndrome: A Process-Oriented Learning Program for Collegiate Low Achievers,”College Student Journal Monograph, 6 (1972), 1–13.
3.
J. S. Gillis and R. Jessor, “Effects of Brief Psychotherapy on Belief in Internal Control: An Exploratory Study,”Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, and Practice, 7 (1970), 135–136; W. L. Kirtner and D. S. Cartwright, “Success and Failure in Client-Centered Therapy as a Function of Initial In-Therapy Behavior,”Journal of Consulting Psychology, 22 (1958), 329–335
4.
C. Perry, “Client Internalizing and/or Client Externalizing Consistency: Its Effect on Therapeutic Process and Outcome.” Unpublished doctoral dissertation (East Lansing: Michigan State University, 1969).
5.
R. M. Pierce, P. G. Schauble, and A. Farkas, “Teaching Internalization Behavior to Clients,”Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, and Practice, 7 (1970), 217–220.
6.
Felton and Biggs, “Group Psychotherapy”; Felton and Biggs, “Teaching Internalization”; Felton and Thomas, “How to Beat the Failure Syndrome.”
7.
J. Fagan and I. L. Shepherd (eds), Gestalt Therapy Now (Palo Alto, Calif.: Science and Behavior Books, 1970); F. S. Perls, Gestalt Therapy Verbatim (Lafayette, Calif.: Real People Press, 1969).
8.
H. R. Davidson, Y. Battin, and P. Van Osdel, “Summary Report of the Contemporary Experience Program.” Unpublished manuscript (San Bernardino, Calif.: Cajon High School, 1972).