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An Introduction To Counselling: Second Edition

McLeod, John - Personal Name;

Description Not Available


Availability
07736Jubilee School Library (Secondary)Available
Detail Information
Series Title
-
Call Number
R 361.06 MCL a (2)
Publisher
: ., 0
Collation
illus. 446p,;24.5cm,index
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
0-335-19710-8
Classification
361.06
Content Type
-
Media Type
-
Carrier Type
-
Edition
First
Subject(s)
Social Problems - Counseling
counselling
diversity of counselling theory and practice
aims of counselling
counselling as an interdisciplinary area of study
cultural and historical origins
emergence of the trade in lunacy
intervention of psychotherapy
secularization of society
role of Carl Rogers
therapy as a response to the 'empty self'
expansion of counselling in the late twentieth cen
social meaning of counselling
image of the person
psychodynamic approach
childhood origins of emotional problems
importance of the 'unconscious'
therapeutic techniques used in psychoanalysis
post-Freudian evolution of the psychodynamic appro
object relations school
British Independents
psychodynamic counselling within a time-limited fr
appraisal of the psychodynamic approach
cognitive-behavioural approach
origins of the cognitive-behavioural approach
application of behavioural ideas in clinical pract
cognitive strand
cognitive processes
cognitive content
techniques and methods of cognitive-behavioural co
appraisal of the cognitive-behavioural counselling
constructivist revolution
person-centered approach
evolution of the person-centred theory
therapeutic relationship
revisioning the concept of empathy
therapeutic process
experiential focusing
process-experiential model of therapy
appraisal of the person-centred approach
working with systems
understanding human systems
analysis and treatment of family systems
counsellor as consultant: working with organizatio
conclusions: themes and issues in the application
feminist approaches: the radicalization of counsel
feminism as philosophy and social action
theory and practice of feminist counselling
integrationist approaches
The Stone Center model of feminist counselling
Radical feminist therapy
Therapist as outlaw: the need for a feminist ethic
conclusions: issues in feminist counselling
narrative approaches: working with stories
competing ways of understanding narrative
psychodynamic approaches to narrative
cognitive/constructivist approaches to narrative
social constructionist narrative therapy
externalizing the problem
enlisting community resources and audiences
multiculturalism as an approach to counselling
underlying cultural aspects
concept of reality
sense of self
construction of morality
significance of place
externally observable cultural aspects
multicultural counselling in practice
cultural awareness traing for counsellors
adapting existing services and agencies to meet th
creating new specialist agencies
promoting research into multicultural counselling
understanding theoretical diversity: brand names a
underlying unity of approaches to counselling: 'no
brand names and special ingredients
roots of theoretical diversity
pool of ideas and concepts
social context of theory
use of theory in practice
combining approaches: issues in eclecticism and in
varieties of integration
use of client assessment in integrative approaches
use of 'transtheoretical' concepts in integrative
missing dimension: counsellor development
process of counselling
process of counselling: beginnings and endings
middle part of counselling: the process of change
nature of therapeutic events
process defined in terms of counsellor behaviour a
convert dimension of process: what is going on beh
towards a comprehensive analysis of process: bring
institutionalization of power and oppression in co
language and concepts of counselling
counsellor as an agent of social control
control of space, territory and time
differential access to services
corruption of friendship
counselling with economically disadvantaged people
politics of counselling with lesbians, gay men and
counselling and religious commitment
other disadvantaged and marginalized groups
some principles of anti-oppressive practice on cou
developing a critique of mainstream, 'majority' th
empowerement and emancipation as goals of counsell
empowerment and emancipation as goals of counselli
developing a 'user friendly' approach to counselli
morals, values and ethics in counselling practice
dual relationships
values in counselling
ethics and moral reasoning
personal intuition
ethical guidelines developed by professional organ
ethical principles
general moral theories
applying moral principles and thical codes: from t
sexual exploitation of clients
strategies for maintaining ethical standards
organizational context
types of counselling organization
nature of counselling organizations
organizational culture
institutional defence mechanisms
parallel process
developmental history of the agency
role conflict
role of the paraprofessional or voluntary counsell
organizational stress and burnout
stability of funding
alternative modes of delivery
time-limited counselling
non-professional counsellors
telephone counselling
counselling on the internet
reading and writing as therapy
group counselling and therapy
self-help groups
couples counselling
role of research
outcome and evaluation research
process research
studies of process from a client-centred perspecti
ethical dilemmas in counselling research
problem of reactivity
relevance of research for practitioners
skills and qualities of the effective counsellor
interpersonal skill
personal beliefs and attitudes
conceptual ability
personal 'soundness'
mastery of technique
ability to understand and work within social syste
a developmental model of counsellor competence
training and supervision in counselling
historical trends in counsellor training
key elements in counsellor training courses
theoretical frameworks
counselling skills
work on self
professional issues
supervised practice
research awareness
issues and dilemmas in counsellor training
selection of trainees
assessment of counsellor competence
supervision
beyond an introduction: continuing the conversatio
tension between individual autonomy/freedom and co
nature of power and influence
location of identity in time and history
significance of bodily experience
basis for knowledge, truth and moral action
Specific Detail Info
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Statement of Responsibility
-
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