Friday, 18 August 2017
Tuesday, 28 March 2017
Saturday, 11 March 2017
Week 4 - Levels of Therapeutic Presence
Stillness, Insight, and wisdom arise only when we can settle into being complete in this moment, without having to seek or hold on to or reject anything. -Jon Kabat-Zinn (1994, p. 54)
Prior to beginning a session with a client, it is vital for the counsellor to become present to their own energy and feelings about the previous session or anything that is happening in their private life. Are there residual elements that may impact the next session? Counsellors may practice a grounding style that works for them. It is an important factor therapeutic practice in clearing space so that the counsellor can be fully present for the next client's energy is an important factor in counselling.
FIVE LEVELS OF DEEPENING INTO PRESENCE IN SESSION
Osterman and Schwartz-Barcott ( 1996)
1. physical presence (light presence)
a. contact with other-light presence (superficial or small talk)
b. settling into the room/chairs
c. awareness of own body (present moment awareness, contact with chair)
2. psychological presence (partial presence)
a. hearing the story, checking in
b. listening, attending, attunement, caring, openness, and interest
3. emotional presence (presence with and for the other)
a. understanding, compassion, acceptance, empathy, unconditional positive regard
b. responding or providing intervention or empathic response in resonance to what the client is sharing
4. transpersonal presence (presence with spirit)
a. body as a vessel
b. contact with deeper conn_ection between therapist and client
c. contact with deeper intuition
d. contact with spirituality (vitality, enhanced sensation, and perception)
5. relational therapeutic presence (all the levels)
a. vacillating (dancing) between what is needed in the moment of deep contact with self, with the client, and with a deeper spirituality and intuition
b. being fully with and for the other yet filled with energy, vitality, and a spiritual transcendence.
Geller, S. M., & Greenberg, L. S. (2012). Levels of therapeutic presence. In Therapeutic presence: A mindful approach to effective therapy (pp. 135-142). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Sunday, 26 February 2017
Week 3 : Being critically reflective
As we believe it is important for people undertaking critical reflection to have an appreciation of the different theoretical traditions.
The four theoretical traditions underpinning critical reflection 1. The reflective approach to theory and practice 2. Reflexivity 3. Postmodernism and deconstruction 4. Critical social theory
Reflective practice as an idea builds on the notion of reflection on experience, and applies it specifically to learning in the field of professional practice.
Fook, J.,Gardner.,(2007) Fiona. Practising Critical Reflection : A Handbook. Buckingham, GB: Open University Press.
Below is a direct copy of the email sent from Judith Ayre " Critical Reflectiontopic for the BBC tomorrow. Please Read Learning activity 4.2 from week 4" received 27/2/17"As a process, critical thinking involves adults in recognising andresearching the assumptions that undergird their thoughts and actions (Brookfield,1987).
The four theoretical traditions underpinning critical reflection 1. The reflective approach to theory and practice 2. Reflexivity 3. Postmodernism and deconstruction 4. Critical social theory
Reflective practice as an idea builds on the notion of reflection on experience, and applies it specifically to learning in the field of professional practice.
Fook, J.,Gardner.,(2007) Fiona. Practising Critical Reflection : A Handbook. Buckingham, GB: Open University Press.
Below is a direct copy of the email sent from Judith Ayre " Critical Reflectiontopic for the BBC tomorrow. Please Read Learning activity 4.2 from week 4" received 27/2/17"As a process, critical thinking involves adults in recognising andresearching the assumptions that undergird their thoughts and actions (Brookfield,1987).
Assumptions are the taken-for-granted beliefs about the world and our place within it that seem so obvious to us that they do not seem to need to be statedexplicitly. Assumptions give meaning and purpose to who we are and what we do. In many ways we are our assumptions. So much of what we think, say, and do is based on assumptions about how the world should work and about what counts as appropriate, moral action. Yet frequently these assumptions are not recognized for the provisional understandings they really are. Ideas and actions that we regard as commonsense conventional wisdoms are often based on uncritically accepted assumptions. Some person, institution, or authority that we either trust or fear has told us that this is the way things are and we have accepted them unquestioningly. When we think critically, we research these assumptions for the evidence and experiences that inform them" (Brookfield, 1997)
Fook and Gardner (2007) define a two-stage process as a way of engaging with connections between: * An experience - a specific experience is a useful starting point; * the emotions, thought, reactions and actions related to that experience; * what matters about the experience, including related assumptions and values at a fundamental level; and * the influence of social context and history both individually and collectively with the expectation of the critically reflective process leading to socially just change (Gardner, 2014 p. 24).
They offer the following questions questions to aid critical reflection (Fook & Gardner, 2007, p. 75):
Stage one: * What does my account of my critical incident imply about, for example, my basic ideals or values, my beliefsabout power, my view of myself and other people, what I believe about professionalism? * Are there any gaps or contradictions between what I say I do and what is implied by what I do?
For stage two: * What is behind these contradictions and where do they come from? * How do I handle these contradictions? * What needs to change about my thinking or practice to handle the contradictions?
CRITICAL ANALYTICAL WRITING:
STATES what happened
IDENTIFIES the significance (of what happened)
STATES what something is like
EVALUATES the strengths and weaknesses
GIVES information
CONTRASTS one piece of information against another and draws conclusions
EXPLAINS what a theory says
SHOWS WHY a theory is suitable or relevant
NOTES the skills used
IDENTIFIES WHETHER the skills used are appropriate or suitable
STATES the different components
WEIGHS UP the importance of component parts
STATES options
GIVES REASONS for selecting each option
LISTS in any order
STRUCTURES information in order of importance
STATES links between information
SHOWS THE RELEVANCE of links between pieces of information
When critically examining theory the Heath (2012) in section 3 provides a useful framework (p. 16): * Ask whether the argument is logical. * Is the argument based on sound premises? * Do the premises support the conclusion? * Ask for evidence that the truth claim really is a fact and then examine the quality of the evidence for it beinga fact. * Ask about the context in which this ‘fact’ has emerged. How might the context have affected what counts as‘factual’, which evidence is seen as relevant, and which questions went unasked?* If we can identify a philosophy, theory or approach on which the claim being made is based, we might ask what other theories would say about this claim. * What other approaches exist? How would they respond to this claim? * What are the benefits of the proposal? What are its costs? Who will benefit from this proposal? Who will pay, orbear the costs? * Ask how the medium chosen invites us to accept the overt message/s and the implicit message/s. Is the medium inviting an emotional response that renders us more likely to accept thesemessages?
These are a set of very important questions which must be answered if you want to do well in your essays. I your undergrad or in your psyche essays, you were asked to find a reference to back up your views. In critical analysis you are being asked to question author's truth claims and even look at underlying assumptions behind legitimate research and how the underlying assumptions might skew the research.
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Tuesday, 21 February 2017
Week 2 Trimester 1 Meta theory: Person and Practice of the Psychotherapist
"All have won and all must have Prizes" the Dodo Bird effect coined from Alice in Wonderland.
Findings are that there are many common factors across counselling theories and therapeutic practices that are critical factors to therapeutic change.
All good theories are creating therapeutic change.
Therapeutic change process therapists bring their views of human nature, change process and theories.
Integration of factors of the therapy process unconscious assumptions/leaded practice, bias of therapies that might influence your practice.
Counselling deals more in the present that the past and more in the conscious than the unconscious
Formism - similarities, personality typing, boxes,
Mechanistic - technical workings of humans, one of the cogs is broken, can we fix it CBT
Organismic- we go through stages and ages, things that limit growth, developmental,
Contextual -story or narrative, changing the meaning of the story Narrative therapy
Psycho-dynamic Counselling. Learning to counsel
Focus is the clients personal sight and functioning of the unconscious
Making what is unconscious, conscious because that is where the dysfunction lies
Gaining of insight and catharsis equals resolution of conflict
Transference is the client's unconsciously transfer feelings and project them onto the therapist. The client unknowingly associates attitudes for other people onto the therapist ( doctors, teachers. parents, a person from the past) These projections could be hostile or positive feelings.If the counsellor responds to these projected feelings this would be called counter-transference.
Person Centred Counselling
Rogers: 3 core conditions to facilitate therapeutic growth are
Findings are that there are many common factors across counselling theories and therapeutic practices that are critical factors to therapeutic change.
All good theories are creating therapeutic change.
Therapeutic change process therapists bring their views of human nature, change process and theories.
Integration of factors of the therapy process unconscious assumptions/leaded practice, bias of therapies that might influence your practice.
Counselling deals more in the present that the past and more in the conscious than the unconscious
Formism - similarities, personality typing, boxes,
Mechanistic - technical workings of humans, one of the cogs is broken, can we fix it CBT
Organismic- we go through stages and ages, things that limit growth, developmental,
Contextual -story or narrative, changing the meaning of the story Narrative therapy
Psycho-dynamic Counselling. Learning to counsel
Focus is the clients personal sight and functioning of the unconscious
Making what is unconscious, conscious because that is where the dysfunction lies
Gaining of insight and catharsis equals resolution of conflict
Transference is the client's unconsciously transfer feelings and project them onto the therapist. The client unknowingly associates attitudes for other people onto the therapist ( doctors, teachers. parents, a person from the past) These projections could be hostile or positive feelings.If the counsellor responds to these projected feelings this would be called counter-transference.
Person Centred Counselling
Rogers: 3 core conditions to facilitate therapeutic growth are
- Genuineness
- Unconditional regard
- Empathic understanding as well as Non-possessive warmth
CBT
Aaron T Beck Founder
How a person thinks and how thinking influences you behaviour. What you think you become.
Faulty learned patterns of behaviour are the root of all emotional or behavioural problems and changing thoughts and behaviours rather that finding the root of the problem is the focus of the therapy.
Eclectic and integrative approaches
Eclectic counsellors use a range of techniques that will suit the individual needs of the client at the time
Integrative counsellors may develop new counselling techniques by borrowing philosophies and practices from different theories to design a new model.
Confidentiality
I struggle personally with working with children. Due to my past and the high prevalence of childhood abuse in society, I have found the content in the chapter on confidentiality quite triggering.
I intend to avoid placing myself directly in the position of counselling children. Situations may arise where I may feel the need to protect a child whom I discover is being mistreated by my client and therefor would have no choice but contact DHS, breaking client - therapist confidentiality but I would inform the client of my intentions.
Saturday, 18 February 2017
Week 1 Trimester 1 18/2/17
I have had sweaty palms, aches and pains and an upset tummy for most of the week solely because of my poor faith in my computer skills. I muddled through the ACAP student portal managing to gain access my online classes, general information and readings. Now that I know what is going on and have had a week to cyber meet some classmates, I can see just how well the site has been laid out. It was my own sense of self that was the thing that was holding me back and causing me anxiety which was, in turn, rendering me unable to engage my thoughts. On the first day that I tried to organise my academic life I could swear that the letter G escaped from my keyboard. Of course, now that my inner critic is no longer running the show the letter G has returned. There you go!
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