Conselling
Conselling
Conselling
Counselling is the means by which one person helps another through purposeful conversation
It involves a series of problem solving interviews
A process by which two people meet to explore personal problems and to identify solutions
Counselling is a method of identifying practical solutions to life.
Definition
The process by which the structure of the self is relaxed in the safety of the relationship with the
therapist, and previously denied experiences are perceived and then integrated into an altered self.
- Carl Rogers
Counselling is an activity . . . for working with relatively normal-functioning individuals who are
experiencing developmental or adjustment problems
What is Counselling?
Provision of assistance and guidance in resolving personal, social or psychological problems and
difficulties, especially by a professional
Client
Counsellor
Client gains control over his
The process leads to action on the part of the client
Counsellor is a person who listens
Personal growth of the client usually occurs
Resolution of problems is an expectation
Objectives
To make the person self sufficient, self dependent, self directedfandfto adjust
To help individuals overcome obstacles / problems / tensions in their personal
To help clients to understand themselves as they are
To bring about voluntary change in their behaviour
To help clients get insight into their problems
To Relate, Relieve, Release, Relearn, Relax and Return to normal self (6 R‘ s)
Goals
Scope
Educational setting
Industrial setting
Hospital setting
Community setting
Youth health / development organisations
Career guidance
Geriatric population
Correctional centres
Premarital and marital counselling
Vulnerable Population
Ethics
Ethics - Definition
Ethics is "a set of concepts and principles that guide us in determining what behaviour helps or
harms sentient creatures“
Principles
1. Ethical decisions need to be strongly supported by one or more of these principles without any
contradiction from others
2. A counsellor’s obligation is to consider all the relevant circumstances with as much care as is
reasonably possible and to be accountable for decisions made
–Confidentiality as an obligation arising from the client’s trust; restrict any disclosure of confidential
information
◦ Means acting in the best interests of the client based on professional assessment
◦ Directs attention to working strictly within one’s limits of competence and providing services on
the basis of adequate training or experience
◦ There is an obligation to use regular and on-going supervision to enhance the quality of the
services provided and to commit to updating practice by continuing professional development
• involves avoiding sexual, financial, emotional or any other form of client exploitation
• The counsellor has an ethical responsibility to strive to reduce any harm caused to a client even
when the harm is unavoidable or unintended.
5. Justice: the fair and impartial treatment of all clients and the provision of adequate services
◦ Refers to being just and fair to all clients and respecting their human rights and dignity
◦ A commitment to fairness requires the ability to appreciate differences between people and
avoiding discrimination against people or groups according to their personal or social characteristics.
◦ There is an ethical responsibility to use supervision for appropriate personal and professional
support and development, and to seek training and other opportunities for continuing professional
development
Client Welfare: Client’s needs should come before counsellor needs and the counsellor needs to act
in the client’s best interest.
Informed Consent: Counsellors need to inform clients as to the nature of counselling and answer
questions so that the client can make an informed decision.
Confidentiality: Clients must be able to feel safe within the therapeutic relationship for counselling
to be most effective.
Dual Relationships: When a counselor has more than one relationship with a client (e.g. The
counselor is a friend and the counselor)
When a client threatens another person’s life or with significant bodily harm
When the client is harmful to himself
When a child is being sexually abused
If the counselor determines the client needs hospitalization
If the information is involved in a court action
Professional / supportive communication doesn’t apply ……
When a counselor is performing a court ordered evaluation.
When the client is suicidal.
when the client sues the counselor.
When the client uses a mental disorder as a legal defense
When an underage child is being abused.
When a client discloses an intent to commit a crime or is dangerous to others.
When a client needs hospitalization.
Qualities of a counsellor
Qualities of a Counsellor
Concern for people
Warmth, acceptance and genuineness
Optimism and confidence
Flexibility and tolerance
Ability to articulate thoughts and ideas
Commitment to personal wholeness on physical, emotional, social, intellectual and spiritual
levels
Commitment to the development of one’s own skills, knowledge, supervision and
mentorship
Ability to maintain confidentiality
Have a good understanding of human nature and behaviour
positive regard
concreteness
sense of humour
self awareness (Small Talk by Tasha Eurich on self awareness)
All clients are entitled to good standards of practice and care from their practitioners in counselling
Giving careful consideration to the limitations of their training and experience and work
within these limits, taking advantage of available professional support
Dual relationships arise when the practitioner has two or more kinds of relationship
concurrently with a client, for example client and trainee -The existence of a dual
relationship with a client is seldom neutral and can have a powerful beneficial or detrimental
impact
Maintaining appropriate records of their work with clients unless there are adequate
reasons for not keeping any records
All records should be accurate, respectful of clients and protected from unauthorized
disclosure.
Regularly monitoring and reviewing one’s work is essential to maintaining good practice
Be open and conscientious in considering feedback from colleagues, appraisals and
assessments. Responding constructively to feedback helps to advance practice.
A commitment to good practice requires practitioners to keep up to date with the latest
knowledge.
Keeping trust
The practice of counselling depends on gaining and honouring the
Counsellors should respond promptly and appropriately to any complaint received from the
clients.
Counsellors should try to remedy any harm they may have caused to their clients and to
prevent any further harm. An apology may be the appropriate response.
Practitioners should discuss with their supervisor the circumstances in which they may have
harmed a client in order to ensure that the appropriate steps have been taken to reduce any
harm and to prevent any repetition.
Care of self as a counsellor
Attending to your well-being is essential to sustaining good practice
Practitioners have a responsibility to themselves to ensure that their work does not become
detrimental to their health or well-being by:
◦ the way that they undertake their work must be as safe as possible and that they seek
appropriate professional support and services as the need arises
Enumerate the consequences of various decisions and reflect on the implications of each course of
action for the client
Decide upon what appears to be the best possible course of action ◦ Implement the best course of
action
◦ Evaluate the outcomes ◦ Document the process
A counsellor has been working in a school for several months and once two girls said they want to
see her. They looked very scared and hesitant. The counsellor started talking gently, asked them to
sit and slowly they relaxed. Then the counsellor asked them what the matter was. They looked at
each other fearfully and then one girl told the counsellor that they have secret to tell her. They told
her that the new PT sir has been acting very weirdly. With the pretext of teaching them badminton
he has been touching their body with bad intentions. This had been going on for some months and
all the girls are very scared to tell any one about it. Matters went worse once when one of them was
cornered by him in the sports room and he attempted to molest her. He also threatened her not to
inform this to anybody else. At this the girl who had been the victim started crying. They told the
counsellor that they like her and feel that they can trust her so they thought of telling her. They
asked her what to do. They did not want her to tell any one – that she should keep their secret …
what should the counsellor do in these circumstances?
characteristics of Counselling
It is a psychological process
◦ Goal of counseling has got mind component ◦ Counselling process is psychological
◦ Underlying theories are psychological
◦ Movement, flow and interaction influenced by behavior (2 persons)
Characteristics of Counselling
To start on time
To make the client comfortable to get him relaxed
To facilitate client to narrate the situation and not making assumptions
To note the demeanor of the client
Evolution of counselling
In 1800s, modern psychology originated in Western Europe and US ◦ Women and other minorities
were excluded from higher education
◦ Much of history was written by privileged white men from their perspective
Before Freud, Pierre Janet was developing a theory on human functioning, Freud was validating it
◦ They both developed difference because Freud’s interest in inner conflicts were not considered
significantly
Earlier treatments for human distress and disturbance consisted of combination of 3 procedures
1. Medical – Biological 2. Spiritual
3. Psychosocial
Evolution of counselling
Bio-medical perspective
◦ Stone Age treatment – Trephining – using a stone tool to chip away the human skull till a circular
opening was established
◦ This opening is done by a medicine man (also called as Shaman) – to release the evil spirit dwelling
in afflicted individual’s brain
◦ Evidence reports that people lived many years after this crude procedure
◦ Then came Pre-frontol Lobotomy
Evolution of counselling
Lobotomy
◦ Drilling a small hole in the temple on both sides – insert a dull knife into the brain and make a fan-
shaped incision – then downwards a few minutes later
Then came ECT and various drugs to change the function and balance of the neurotransmitters
which enhances human mental well-being
◦ Strong belief in people was that spiritual concerns and practices are intricately related to
psychological matters
◦ Religious and spiritual leaders often have great wisdom, compassion and insight into the human
conditions
Psychosocial perspective
◦ Humans have understood that verbal interactions and relationship alterations can change thinking
patterns, mood and behavior
◦ Many wise healers of those time used psychological and relational techniques that are similar to
current theoretically driven strategies to help people with psychological difficulties
◦ Buddha / some of the roman philosophers work was considered forebears of current cognitive
theory / therapy
Psychosocial perspective
◦ Avicenna, important person in Islamic medicine – case study from his work
“A prince during his time had melancholia and suffered from delusion “that he was a cow”- Prince
used to tell everybody to kill him and eat his flesh and he never used to eat - Avicenna sent a
message first to inform the prince that the butcher is coming to kill, so be of good cheer - Avicenna
entered the sickroom with a knife and said where is the cow that I will kill it? – He felt the prince all
over and said this cow is too lean and ready to be killed, he must be fattened – then the prince ate
eagerly, gained weight, got rid of delusion and was completely cured”
Most of the pioneers in counseling identified themselves as teachers and social reformers /
advocates
Initially, these helpers were involved primarily in child welfare, educational / vocational guidance
and legal reform.
Evolution of counselling
These helpers’ work was built on specific information and lessons, such as
◦ moral instruction on being good and doing right and ◦ dealing with intra- and interpersonal
relations
In 1930s the U.S. government became more involved in guidance and counseling
1950s – 4 major theories influenced the work of counsellors were: ◦ Psychoanalysis and insight
theory
◦ Trait factor of directive approach
◦ Humanistic and client centred theory ◦ Behavioral theories
1970s – Rapid growth of counselling outside educational institutions ◦ Helping skills program
◦ State licensure
After 2000 – Counselling focus on dealing with violence, trauma, and crises; managed care; wellness;
social justice; technology; leadership; and identity.
Multicultural Counselling
Recognises the differences in clients and opposes the presumption that differences in the clients
don’t matter in counselling help
Counselling Process
Principles of counselling
Psychological climate resulting from the interpersonal contact of client and counselor.
Living and evolving condition.
Relationship includes respect, trust, and relative psychological comfort.
Client’s
Inquiry
Associating facts
Recording information
Observation
1. Survival
2. Physical needs
3. Love and sex
4. Status, success, and self-esteem
5. Mental health
6. Freedom
7. Challenge
8. Cognitive Clarity
Interview
Focus
format:
Area
Focus
Presenting problem and context
Basic Questions Detailed Inquiry
• Clarify stressors
• Elicit
- coping skills,
- social support, - and resources
• Note
- age & mannerisms - dress & grooming - orientation . . . .
• Probe
- anxiety symptoms
- form, content, thought. - suicidal ideation
- violent impulses . . . .
13
Focus
Developmental history and dynamics
• Clarify
- current self-view
- level of self-esteem - personality style
• Shift to the past, how were things when you were growing up?
• Note
- developmental milestones
- experience in school - best friends
- educational level
• Elicit - job
- legal problems
- social support system - race, age, gender
- sexual orientation - religion
- language
- dietary influences - education
Client resources
Conceptualizing Problems
Conceptualizing Problems
• Be inappropriate.
• Contribute to the problem.
• Complicate the problem.
• Miscommunication channels
• Expectations
• Self-fulfilling prophesies
• Coping styles
5. Contextual factors
• Time
• Place
• Concurrent events
• Cultural and socio-political issues
Goal Setting
Greater objectivity
Training in
◦ Normal and
◦ Abnormal behavior
Process experience
Client
Potential insights
Process Goals
Includes:
◦ Establishing rapport
◦ Providing a non-threatening setting and
◦ Possessing and communicating accurate empathy and unconditional regard.
Outcome Goals
Are different for each client and directly related to clients’ changes.
Always subject to modification and refinement.
To begin, formulate tentative outcome goals.
Modify goals as needed to support effective change.
After assessment and goals setting, answers the question, “How shall we accomplish these goals?”
Interventions
Selecting an intervention may become an adaptive process.
Termination
Types of Termination
1. Suggested termination, with client’s agreement
2. Imposed termination
• Continuing is against client’s best interest
• Client is deteriorating, not progressing
• Incompatibility with the counsellor
3. Situational termination
• Client moves
• Employment or insurance changes
Counsellor must carefully consider the most effective way to terminate each client.
Participation
Engagement, involvement and commitment by client and therapist that contributes to the bonding
component of the relationship.
Substantial evidence supports therapists and client's engagement as a central construct of the
therapeutic relationship (Fuhriman & Burlingame, 1990; Orlinsky & Howard, 1986)
Individualisation
Recognition and understanding of each client’s unique qualities
Each client is an individual
Aims at helping client to use his/her abilities and resources to deal with his/her problem
Recognition and understanding of client’s difficulties and feelings are crucial for entering into a
helping relationship
Means of Individualisation
Thoughtfulness in details
Privacy in interviews
Caring in keeping appointments
preparation for interviews
Enabling the client
Flexibility
Confidentiality
Communication
Communication can be defined as the process by which people share ideas, experience, knowledge
and feelings through the transmission of symbolic messages.
Also include giving information through body language, gestures, and looks, facial expressions can
show how we feel and what we think about an issue or another person.
Written Word
The Communication Process
Medium
Barrier
SENDER
(encodes)
Barrier
RECEIVER (decodes)
Feedback/Response
Relaxes Opens up
Leans toward the other person Establishes eye contact
Shows appropriate facial expressions
Barriers to communication
• Language
Acceptance
Implies liking the client irrespective of his negative qualities and conduct
Expression of goodwill
Conveys deep concern and active understanding
Involves - observance of common courtesies – respect for the client’s ideas – treating him/her as
equal
Does not mean that we approve of deviant attitude and behavior
Pertinent reality
Purpose is therapeutic
Looking at client as s/he really is
Obstacles to Acceptance
Self-confidence
Self-confidence is the belief in oneself and abilities, it describes an internal state made up of what
we think and feel about ourselves
It is not unusual to feel quite confident in some circumstances and less confident in others
Self-confidence
Influenced by
◦ past events and how we remember them
◦ recalling a former success has a very different outcome in terms of our confidence levels than
thinking about an occasion when we failed.
What would improve self-confidence? Learn to be more assertive and not feel guilty about saying no
Examine why one feel bad about him/herself and what you can do to change this
Monitor oneself’s talk and question their negative statements about oneself
Stop focusing on yourself too much and try to help others
Make time for yourself and treat yourself often
Don't be afraid to ask others for what you want
Effect of low self-confidence Shyness
Communication difficulties
Social anxiety
Lack of assertiveness
• Being aware of one’s own attitude, values and beliefs and how these have an affect on one’s
interaction with other people
• Usually we see the world not as it is, but as we are.
• Human perception is a creative process that relies on previous experience and knowledge to make
sense of present reality
Attitudes, Values and Beliefs •c Counsellor attitudes, values, beliefs can influence
Be aware…
• Helps indentify any stereotypic way of thinking, prejudices or biases that could influence how one
helps certain clients
• Helps in understanding the client’s problem from his/her viewpoint
• Helps us to be more conscious in our reactions and feelings
Self – awareness is important, reasons:
Counselling Skills
UNIT – III
Counselling Skills
Active listening
Empathy
Paraphrasing and mirroring
Reflecting feelings
Clarifying
Questioning & probing
Summarizing
Positive assets
Active Listening
What is the client saying ? - paying attention to needs, background, values and beliefs
How is he/she saying it ?
Does the client’s non-verbal communication agree with what he/she is saying in words ? If not, what
does that mean ?
Is there a gap in what the client is saying ? Why is he/she leaving it out ?
What are my (counsellor’s) own reactions (physical, emotional, values, attitude) to what the client is
saying?
Active Listening
Attending skills
- Greeting skills
- Politeness
- Kindness
Empathy
Empathy is the ability to put ones own self in the place of the client and feel what he or she could be
feeling at the moment.
Different from sympathy - feel & express pity (sympathy emphasizes helplessness of client)
Why is empathy important ?
• Repeating in one’s own words what the client has said to show one’s understanding
• It helps the process of counselling by
–Clarifying for the client what he/she has said
–Clarifying for the counsellor what the client has said – by feeding back what you have heard, you
can check on the accuracy of your listening
–Helping client talk in more details about issues of concern to them
–Helping a talkative client to stop repeating the same facts or story
Reflecting feelings
To pick up the client’ s feelings & letting him/her know you have understood how & what he/she is
feeling
To do this one needs to observe
• Emotional words used by the client
• Non-verbally expressed emotional words
Reflecting feelings
1. Begin with words such as, “you feel…”, “sounds like you feel…”
2. Feeling words may be added eg. Sad, happy, glad
3. The context may be added through a paraphrase or repetition of key content
eg. “looks like you feel happy about getting a job”
4. A present tense reflection is more effective eg. “you feel..” rather than “you felt…”
5. After identifying a feeling, you can clarify so that the client can correct you if needed
eg. “am I hearing correctly ?”
Clarifying
To begin an interview
To encourage client elaboration
To elicit specific examples
To motivate clients to communicate
Purposes of close ended questions
To obtain specific information
To identify parameters of a problem or issue
To narrow the topic of discussion
To interrupt an over talkative client
Probing
Example:
Client: I was very tired by the time I reached home, than I cooked food for the family
Counsellor: In spite of being very tired you managed to cook a full meal for your family.
Counselling Skills
Active listening
Empathy
Paraphrasing and mirroring
Reflecting feelings
Clarifying
Questioning & probing
Summarizing
Positive assets
History
• Group counseling in the United States can be traced back to the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries
• Millions of immigrants moved to American shores and most of these immigrants settled in
large cities and had difficulties to adjust to life in US
• Many organizations such as Hull House in Chicago were founded to assist them known as
settlement houses
• These agencies helped immigrant groups lobby for better housing, working conditions, and
recreational facilities.
• These early social work groups valued group participation, the democratic process, and
personal growth.
Origins in Social Work
• Some early psychoanalysts, especially Alfred Adler, a student of Sigmund Freud, believed
that many individual problems were social in origin.
• In the 1930s Adler encouraged his patients to meet in groups to provide mutual support.
• At around the same time, social work groups began forming in mental hospitals, child
guidance clinics, prisons, and public assistance agencies.
What is a group?
Types of Groups
• Task Groups: A group that comes together to perform a task that has a concrete goal (e.g.
community organizations, committees, planning groups, task force)
• Guidance / Psycho-educational Group: Preventative and educational groups that help group
members learn information about a particular topic or issue and might also help group members
cope with that same issue (E.g. motivation, career guidance etc)
•Support Groups: These deal with special populations and deal with specific issues and offer
support, comfort, and connectedness to others.
•Self-help Groups: These have no formal or trained group leader. (e.g. Alcoholics Anonymous or
Gamblers Anonymous.)
Group Counselling
Stages of Groups
•Stage One (Orientation/Forming): Group members become oriented to the group and to each
other.
•Stage Two (Transition/Storming): Anxiety and ambiguity become prevalent as group members
struggle to define themselves and group norms.
• Stage Four (Working/Performing): Group members experiment with new ideas, behaviors or
ways of thinking. Egalitarianism develops.
• Stage Five (Adjourning/Terminating): This is the time when the group disbands.
Lets have a group counselling session
Leadership Styles
Leadership Functions
• Group Processing: Making comments on group process to keep the group therapeutic and
attending to group dynamics.
• Directing the focus on the Here and Now: Keeping the focus on right now and not going
Group Leadership Techniques
•Universalizing: Helping members realize they are not alone in their problem(s).
•Linking: Connecting various feelings and concerns expressed by group members to present a
common theme or universalizing aspect.
•Group Size: Varies from 3-4 members to several hundred depending upon the group (e.g.
psychotherapeutic or task group).
• Group counseling and psychotherapy generally work best with 6-8 members.
•Participant Selection: Screening is needed with counseling and psychotherapy groups. Some
people are not well suited for group work.
•Length and Duration of Sessions: Individual sessions are usually 50 minutes, group sessions range
from 1-2 hours. No. of sessions will be determined by the nature of the group and the problem.
Getting Started
•Ground rules must be set at the beginning, such as maintaining confidentiality of group discussions,
showing respect for each other, taking turns talking, etc. (Students assist in creating rules)
•Encourage members to discuss the issues that brought them into the group openly and honestly.
Take adequate care of physical and emotional safety
•The Counselor facilitates the group process; the effective functioning of the group, and guides
individuals in self-discovery.
•Depending upon the group's goals, sessions may be either highly structured or fluid and relatively
undirected.
•Typically, the facilitator steers a middle course, providing direction when the group gets off track,
yet letting members set their own agenda.
•The facilitator should guide the group by reinforcing the positive behaviors they engage in.
•The facilitator should emphasize the commonalities among members during each session to instill a
sense of group identity.
Careful Planning
• Selection
• Group Composition
• Creation of Group
• Formative Stages
• Subgrouping
• Conflict
• Self-disclosure
• Termination
• Problem Behaviors
Subgrouping
Conflict
• Can control conflict by having members switch from 1 to 2 - request group discuss their
experience and understand it can learn to express anger more directly
Self-Disclosure’
• Facilitator must check-in with members individually to assess the value of group
participation (difficulty communicating in a group setting, unable to handle aggressive / hostile
comments from other members
• On-going assessment of group participation during the group
• Recognize the role of each group member
Termination
Termination
•The termination of a group may cause feelings of grief, loss, abandonment, anger, or rejection in
some members
•The facilitator should attempt to deal with these feelings and foster a sense of closure by
encouraging the exploration of feelings and the use of newly acquired coping techniques for
handling them.
•Working through this termination phase is an important part of the process.
Group Membership
• Individuals that share a common problem or concern are often good candidates for group
counseling, where they can share their mutual struggles and feelings.
• In schools, groups for students who have or are currently experiencing their parents
divorce, grief/loss, social skills deficiencies
• Consider the age, grade level, gender, etc
Family Counselling
Understanding family
• Sociologists Burgess and Locke defines
“ Family is a group of persons united by the ties of marriage, blood or adoption; consisting of a single
household, interacting and intercommunicating with each other in their respective social roles of
husband and wife, mother and father, son and daughter, brother and sister creating a common
culture”
• It is not the normal difficulties that create the problem but rather the chronic mishandling of
problems over time.
• Denying the need for change and treating normal family development as a problem or
striving for perfection are all catalysts for family dysfunction.
• Remarried families can have a lot of difficulty with the family life cycle. This happens when
an individual’s development is out of sync with the development of the family.
Family Problems
1. Intake
• Family structure
• Leadership patterns
• Role structure & Functioning
• Communication – Patterns of communication
• Reinforcement
• Cohesiveness
• Adaptive patterns
4. Intervention
• Therapist with other team members plan intervention based on the assessment of family
• Intervention may vary from 6 – 15 sessions or more depending on the family dysfunction,
members’ willingness and affordability of the family
• Implement an integrated model of family counselling approaches with families
2. Family sculpting
• Places the family members in positions and postures that represent aspects of their
relationship and interactions with each other
• Sculptor – One of the family member, therapist – monitor & Actors – family members
• Helping family members to get in touch with their feelings
• Sculptor directs the tableau – other family members do what the sculptor says
• Discuss and comment on the tableau
3. Role-playing
• Role-playing brings of something of reality of family life
4. Videotape replay
• Playing back to families of tapes of their therapy
5. Network therapy
• Getting the family’s complete network together including kinship system, friends & other
significant people
7. Vector therapy
• Aims to alter either the magnitude or the direction of the relevant emotional forces
Unit - III
Approaches to Counselling
Approaches to Counselling
• Psychoanalytical
• Adlerian
• Person-centered
• Cognitive Behavioral
• Rational emotive behavioral
• Existential
• Gestalt
• Reality
• Problem Solving
Psychoanalytic Approach
Sigmund Freud
Levels of mind
• Conscious – Basically the thought, feeling and actions that we are aware about
• Preconscious – thoughts, wishes, feelings and memories that are stored temporarily which
can be retreived to concious awareness when required
• Unconscious – contains the thoughts, wishes, feelings and memories which we are not
aware at all
– Freud believes, we repress or forcibly block a mass of our unacceptable thoughts which are
stored at unconcious level
– In his view, our unacknowledged impulses express themselves in disguised forms like the
work we choose, the beliefs we hold, our daily habits…
The Unconscious
• Are normal behaviors which operate on an unconscious level and tend to deny or distort
reality
• Help the individual cope with anxiety and prevent the ego from being overwhelmed
Psychoanalytic Techniques
• Refers to range of procedural and stylistic factors such as analyst’s anonymity, regularity and
consistency in meetings
Free Association
Dream Analysis
• Therapist uses the “royal road to the unconscious” to bring unconscious material to light
•Analysis and interpretation of resistance
• Refers to an idea, attitude, feeling and action that fosters the status quo and gets in the way
of change
Adlerian Approach
Alfred Adler
Alfred Adler’s Individual Psychology
• Adlerians attempt to view the world from the client’s subjective frame of reference
• How life is in reality is less important than how the individual believes life to be
• It is not the childhood experiences that are crucial , it is our present interpretation of these
events
Social Interest
Birth Order
Therapeutic Goals
•Encouragement is the most powerful method available for changing a person’s beliefs
• Helps build self-confidence and stimulates courage
• Discouragement is the basic condition that prevents people from functioning
• Clients are encouraged to recognize that they have the power to choose and to act
differently
Person-Centered Therapy
Carl Rogers
Person-Centered Therapy
Challenges:
• The assumption that “the counselor knows best”
• The validity of advice, suggestion, persuasion, teaching, diagnosis, and interpretation
• The belief that clients cannot understand and resolve their own problems without direct
help
• The focus on problems over persons
Person - centered therapy (PCT)
• Process of “being with” clients and entering their world of perceptions and feelings is
sufficient for bringing about change (Bohart, 2003)
• Focuses on the constructive side of human nature, on what is right with the person and on
his / her assets
• This is rooted in the client’s capacity for awareness and selfdirected change in attitudes and
behavior
• Emphasis is on:
• How clients act in their world with others
• How they can move forward in constructive direction
• How they can successfully encounter obstacles
Goals of PCT
•Genuineness or congruence - ability of being real, integrated and authentic in providing help
•Unconditional positive regard – ability to convey a unconditional acceptance of the client’s
personhood
•Accurate empathic understanding – ability to understand the emotions of the client and correctly
communicate this understanding
Role of the counsellor
• Focuses on the quality of therapeutic relationship
• Serves as a model of a human being struggling toward greater realness
• Is genuine, integrated, and authentic, without a false front
• Can openly express feelings and attitudes that are present in the relationship with the client
Person-centered expressive arts therapy
•Offering clients an opportunity to create movement, visual art, journal writing, sound and music to
express their feelings and gain insight
Behavior Therapy
Behavior Therapy
•To increase the personal choice and to create new conditions for learning
Therapist role
• Conducting a thorough functional assessment
• ABC model – Antecedent events – Behavior – Consequences
• Strategies to promote generalization and maintain behavior change
• Evaluate the success in behavior change and follow-up
• Classical Conditioning
• In classical conditioning certain respondent behaviors, such as knee jerks and salivation, are
elicited from a passive organism
• Operant Conditioning
• Focuses on actions that operate on the environment to produce consequences
• If the environmental change brought about by the behavior is reinforcing, the chances are
strengthened that the behavior will occur again.
• If the environmental changes produce no reinforcement, the chances are lessened that the
behavior will recur
Four Aspects of Behavior Therapy
•Social Learning Approach
• Gives prominence to the reciprocal interactions between an individual’s behavior and the
environment
•Basic theory:
• To understand the nature of an emotional episode or disturbance it is essential to focus on
the cognitive content of an individual’s reaction to the upsetting event or stream of thoughts
•Goals:
• To change the way clients think by using their automatic thoughts to reach the core
schemata and begin to introduce the idea of schema restructuring
•Principles:
• Automatic thoughts: personalized notions that are triggered by particular stimuli that lead to
emotional responses
•Arbitrary inferences
•Selective abstraction
•Overgeneralization
•Magnification and minimization
•Personalization
•Labeling and mislabeling
•Polarized thinking
CT’s Cognitive Triad
• Cognitive strategies
• Distraction techniques include focus on an object, mental exercises and pleasant memories
• Counting thoughts – just making note of occurrence of negative automatic thoughts
• Behavioral strategies
• Monitoring activities – clients are asked to record the activities which gives pleasure and
which they have mastered over (Mastery)
• Scheduling activities
• Graded task assignment – starting with simple achievable task to complex tasks
•CBT strategies
Steps in REBT
Existential Therapy
Existential Therapy
•Individuals are not victims of circumstances because to a large extent, we are what we choose to
be
•Major aims
• To encourage clients to reflect on life
• To recognise the range of alternatives and to decide among them
Existential Therapy
•The greater our awareness, the greater our possibilities for freedom
•Awareness is realizing that:
• We are finite - time is limited
• We have the potential, the choice, to act or not to act
• Meaning is not automatic - we must seek it
• We are subject to loneliness, meaninglessness, emptiness, guilt and isolation
•Holds awareness of death is a basic human condition that gives significance to living
•Focus is on exploring the degree to which clients are doing the things they value
•Clients can develop healthy awareness of death as a way to evaluate
• how well they are living?
• what changes they want to make in their lives?
Gestalt Therapy
Gestalt Therapy
•Existential & phenomenological approaches is grounded in the client’s “here and now”
•Initial goal is for clients to gain awareness of what they are experiencing and doing now
•Awareness usually involves insight and sometimes introspection, but Gestalt therapists consider it
to be much more than either
Gestalt Therapy
Gestalt means – whole or completion or a form that can not be separated into parts without loosing
its essence.
Important processes and goals include
•Self – awareness
•Knowledge of the environment
•Responsibility for choices and
•Ability to make contact with their dynamic system of inter-relationships and the people in it
Basic assumption
•Individuals have capacity to self-regulate when they are aware of what is happening in and around
them
•Clients need to “be” as fully as possible and not striving to what “should be”
Outcome of Gestalt
The Now
Unfinished Business
Layers of Neurosis
• CONTACT - interacting with nature and with other people without losing one’s individuality
• RESISTANCE TO CONTACT - the defenses we develop to prevent us from experiencing the
present full
Therapeutic Techniques
Reality Therapy
.
Understanding Reality Therapy
Basic Needs
•All internally motivated behavior is geared toward meeting one or more of our basic human needs
• Love and belonging
• Power
• Freedom
• Fun
• Survival (Physiological needs)
Problem solving
Stage 2
Stage 3
Solution – 1:
• Spending more time for studies / going for tution classes Advantages:
• Will perform better in studies
• Self-esteem will improve Disadvantages:
• Always he has to spend more time in studies to do well
• He can not play games to become tall and strong
Example (Evaluating solutions)
Solution – 2:
•Using techniques for studying and memorising
Advantages:
• Learn skills to study better
• Perform better in studies
• Self-esteem will improve
• He does not have to spend lot of time in studies
• He can play and do physical exercises so that he become tall and strong
Disadvantages
• Might not get chance to play in some games because he is small
Problem solving contd….
Stage 4
Follow-up
• Help the client to plan and implement the solution that was decided
Evaluation
• Improvement?
• continue support till the problem is resolved
• No improvement?
• Involve others (family, friends and significant others WITH PERMISSION)
• Refer to other services, if required
Why does problem solving work?
• Respects the client
• Encourages him/her to find solutions him/ her self
• Enhancing thinking skills
• Motivates the client to take responsibilities