"The importance of observation in counselling clients" Essays and Research Papers

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    Guidance and counselling needs A Detailed study of the Guidance and counselling needs for adolescents of Senior Secondary School A synopsis submitted to the Maharshi Dayanand University‚ Rohtak In the partial fulfilment of the degree of the Master of Education Supervisor: Investigator Dr. Sarika Sharma Meetali gupta Ganga Institute of (M.Ed. Student) Education‚ Kablana‚ Ihajjar GANGA INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION Village Kablana‚ 20 Km. Mile Stone‚ Bahadurgarh Road

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    goals of this counselling approach are to find out how individuals perceive themselves here and now and to recognise their strengths‚ growth‚ self-direction and responsibilities. This approach is optimistic and attempts to help individuals by offering a non-judgemental‚ understanding experience. Unlike other therapies the client is responsible for improving his or her life‚ not the therapist. This is a deliberate change from both psychoanalysis and behavioral therapies where the client is diagnosed

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    is unable to limit their judgement of clients due to these stereotypes. Ethical dilemmas If a counsellor finds herself drifting into judgemental thoughts upon listening to a client describe a lifestyle in which she eats all day‚ while attempting to lose weight‚ it will be extremely difficult for me to keep the results of my emotional response to this judgemental attitude from reflecting in my voice and choice of words in working with the client. Clients may be dysfunctional‚ but they aren’t emotionally

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    THE DEPRESSED CLIENT AND CBT The Oxford College notes (2006) define depression as a major affective disorder because it affects feelings‚ mood‚ and thoughts. Feltham and Dryden (1997) define depression as a short-lived mood or chronic condition characterised by hopelessness‚ apathy‚ meaninglessness‚ withdrawal‚ low self-esteem‚ sadness. Depression affects or reveals itself in sadness‚ dejection; depressed cognitions include negative evaluation of one’s self‚ the world and one’s future. Depressed

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    Observation

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    Assessing Behaviors of Young Children IV-3BECEd Prof. Joyce Leviste-Bautista 1. What is observation? According to The Glossary of Education Reform‚ a classroom observation is a formal or informal observation of teaching while it is taking place in a classroom or other learning environment. Typically conducted by fellow teachers‚ administrators‚ or instructional specialists‚ classroom observations are often used to provide teachers with constructive critical feedback aimed at improving their classroom

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    human?” Each and every one of us would probably come up with different concepts and ideas of what the answer could be. What we have to remember is that we are specifically looking at the concepts and theory according to the humanistic approach in counselling. As human beings we all have the potential; that potential is intrinsic for growth and change and could be for anything including positive or negative‚ the choices lie with us‚ depending on the seeds that were sown there in the first place. What

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    UNIT 2: Counselling Theory assignment C1 ABC Certificate Counselling skills Carl Rogers‚ Born in Chicago in 1902 as the 4th of 6 children in a strict Fundamentalist Christian household. Following a course in clinical and educational psychology at Teachers college‚ Columbia‚ working with Leta Hollingsworth‚ he then moved on to the Rochester Society for the prevention of Cruelty to Children. Whilst at Rochester‚ Rogers was influenced by the work of Jessie Taft and Elizabeth Davies both students

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    Counselling Skills Level 3

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    Certificate In Counselling Skills Level 3 Unit 1 Assignment: Creating A Counselling Skills Professional Framework Report 1. Understand What Is Meant By Counselling Skills Counselling skills are a set of communication tools‚ or a competency or accomplishment in communication‚ acquired or developed. Rather than discuss the 6 classic Rogerian necessary conditions of Person-Centred Counselling‚ I will focus on some Counselling skills used

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    Introduction. This Presentation will look at the psychodynamic approach to counselling‚ focusing on how problems arise and continue. Then how therapy seeks to resolve these problems. We will look at conflict between ID and superego and unresolved childhood problems. Then we will look at defence mechanisms. From there we look at how therapy brings the unconscious into the conscious to resolve conflicts. Slide 2. In psychodynamic theory‚ there is the structure of the personality‚ which consist of three

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    Counselling - Lee

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    Introduction Karen Lee the counselee is a middle age‚ middle class housewife with 3 teenage kids who reported general dissatisfaction over her uneventful and predictable life. The therapist in attempt to help her has studied her through psychoanalytic and cognitive behavioral therapies. The difference between these two therapies is very obvious in their length of treatment approach with psychoanalytic therapy requiring longer treatment period. Both also have differences in their substantial grounds

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