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

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    On November 6th‚ I observed a four year-old boy at the UCI Early Childhood Education Center. My observation starts at 4:10pm‚ and it lasts for thirty minutes. At the time I did the observation‚ all of the children woke up from the nap time and started to play outside of the classroom. The playground is at least seventy-five square feet‚ and it has many play stations for children. Three classrooms share the same outside playground‚ and the age groups of those children are from three years old to five

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    Development of person-centred counselling skills By Joanne Graves Make best use of the setting in which helping session takes place. Clarify with clients their understanding and expectations of the helping relationship. The area in which I used to conduct the counselling session was a communal area however I seated my client and myself away from people‚ windows and near the door to the room allowing maximum confidentiality. I felt it was important for my client to be able to feel comfortable

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    Alcohol counselling has many benefits that can help get clients sober and stay sober. The tools and techniques used in counselling can be applied to situations they may face at work‚ school and even their personal life. Although parts of counselling can be difficult‚ the client will be able to uncover underlying issues that may have fuelled their drinking and find out how to overcome them. Without digging deep‚ they will only be patching the problem short-term. Several benefits of alcohol counselling

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    Evaluating Humanistic Counselling Humanistic counselling is the kind of counselling where the specialist provides their clients with the chance to reflect on themselves and evaluate their personal awareness by understanding who they are‚ their individual feelings and the likelihood that they could choose several factors about their individual lives (Counsellor Guide‚ 2000); (Rowan‚ 2014). The humanistic approach focuses majorly on bringing out an individual’s unique characteristics such as growth

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    the clients trust. At any time this confidentiality is broken or the private matters are disclosed it is called a breach of confidentiality. Patients have the right for privacy related to their matters and it has to confidential among any one treating them. Breaching confidentiality is morally‚ ethically and legally wrong. Ethics are a set of principles relating to what is morally right or wrong. Ethics gives a standard of conduct or code of behavior. Talking about what happened to a client or who

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    Unit 01 using counselling skills 1.1 Counselling is to help the client to open up about there feeling inside and thoughts when the client has no one to talk to and is in need to talk to someone. Core counselling skills are... Paraphrasing Reflecting Summarising Focussing Active listening Empathy SOLER Paraphrasing is focusing on the main facts. Reflecting and paraphrasing are similar it’s reporting back to the client what’s been said it is a way of indicating that we are listening

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    COUNSELLING CONCEPTS LEVEL 2 ESSAY The decision to take this course was rooted in a deepening interest in psychotherapy‚ self–development‚ the welfare of other people and in a desire to gain a theoretical base to enrich my current arts and health practice. I understand counselling to be a helping practice that differs from other helping activities‚ such as teaching for example. Counselling requires professional training and is specifically contracted or explicitly agreed. It has a theoretical

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    Loss and grief can mean a variety of different things. It can be the physical loss of a person (death)‚ a thing‚ a limb. It could be the loss of something social –relationships‚ divorce‚ friendships‚ or it could be the loss of a job‚ a loss of expectations. Grief has many different stages and every individual grieves in their own way‚ no two people are the same when it comes to grieving‚ though there are particular stages most people go through‚ but not in any certain order. These include: shock

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    The History of Person Centred Counselling Person Centred Counselling was developed by Carl R. Rogers (1902-1987)‚ a leading American psychologist who was along with Abraham Maslow a major theorist of Humanistic Therapy which developed in the 1950. It is sometimes called

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    Counselling Assignment I. In this assignment‚ I will analyse the principal distinctions between counselling and psychotherapy; I will evaluate the key requirements to be an effective counsellor and the conditions for which it would be appropriate to see a counsellor. I will do that by using a range of resources in my research‚ such as Text Books‚ Journals and the Internet. 1.1 Analyse the principal distinctions between psychotherapy and counselling According to the BACP “Counselling and

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