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    1. The researchers noted that the barriers that stood between integration and teaching of religion and spirituality within training programs rested on various dynamics, such as lack of faculty knowledge, faculty disinterest, seeing religion/spirituality as simply cultural identity, and faculty bias and resistance.

      SECTION 1B - Identifies barriers to R/S training. Shows need for intentional integration in counselor education.

    1. All participants agreed that religion and spirituality can be considered an element that supports the client's autonomy rather than an area of conflict in therapy. These findings suggest a therapeutic balance is possible where ethical boundaries are maintained but religious/spiritual values are not completely excluded.

      SECTION 1B - KEY QUOTE. Shows R/S integration supports client autonomy within ethical bounds. Directly addresses ACA A.4.b concern.

    1. Professional organizations integrated the importance of professional identity in training, higher education, and professional development (CACREP, 2009). Eventually, some state licensing boards began to require a counselor identity that was based on CACREP standards for individuals to become licensed professional counselors.

      SECTION 1A - Connects PI to credentialing/regulation. Supports "regulation" and "training standards" as PI components.

    2. The American Counseling Association (ACA) and affiliated organizations such as the National Board of Certified Counselors and the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP) made a commitment to unify counselors in a shared professional identity

      SECTION 1A - Shows professional associations' role in defining unified identity. Supports "professional associations" as PI component.