CounsellingWhat skills are involved in counselling, and how are they used to help people in personal relationships or the workplace? Readers considering professional help for their problems as well as those interested in counselling as a career will find this revised book indispensable in answering their questions and concerns. It cuts through the theoretical jargon to clearly and thoroughly investigate the field of counselling. |
Contents
The Counsellors Role | 16 |
The Benefits of Acquiring Counselling Skills_27 | 27 |
Practice Makes You Competent | 72 |
Copyright | |
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abuse accept acknowledge anger angry anxiety approach appropriate asked assessment associated attention attitudes aware B.F. Skinner become beliefs body language Carl Rogers challenge child classical conditioning cognitive cognitive-behavioural Colin communication conflict confrontation cope core conditions counselling skills counsellor counsellor needs countertransference culture defence depression dreams emotional empathic example exercise experience experienced explore expression fear feedback felt focus Freud Fritz Perls grief help the client helper human individual inner insight introjected involves issues Johari window Jung learning listening material means Melanie Klein mother negative neurosis Oedipus complex offer ourselves parent person-centred practice problems professional psychoanalytic psychodynamic psychological Psychosynthesis psychotherapy pupils questions relation relationship relaxation response role self-concept self-harm sense session sexual situation social someone stage Superego supervision supervisor talk teachers techniques term theory therapeutic therapist thoughts and feelings transference unconditional positive regard unconscious unconscious mind understanding