Counselling and the Life Course

Capa
SAGE, 23/03/2004 - 130 páginas
`Essential reading for student, fledgling and experienced counsellors alike' - Mark Edwards, Nurturing Potential

`Beautifully written and well researched and full of useful structured exercise for therapists and clients, this is a combination of psychology textbook and counselling handbook - theoretical a, yet practical' - Healthcare Counselling and Psychotherapy Journal

Counselling and the Life Course

introduces counsellors to the concept of the life course as a multidimensional and multidisciplinary framework for thinking about clients' lives within and beyond the counselling setting. It aims to give counsellors an understanding of human development, and how it impacts practically upon their work with clients.

The book engages with the tension between, on the one hand, recognizing age and life stage as important dimensions of difference, and on the other, avoiding the pitfalls of age stereotyping and ageist discrimination. At the same time, Counselling and the Life Course shows how the concept of the life course can be used as a framework for considering the commonalities between different life stages. This provides a focus for counsellors of how to draw on their existing skills and expertise when working with clients of a different age and life stage to those with whom they generally meet. The impact of both counsellor and client age on the counselling relationship is also considered.

The book includes an `Activity Trail' of structured exercises in order to encourage reflection on the concepts discussed and their relevance to clients, the readers themselves, and their counselling practice.

 

Índice

Developmental tasks and themes
18
Counselling across the life course
35
Transitions and turning points
53
Life stories
69
Taking a life course perspective
85
References
114
Direitos de autor

Outras edições - Ver tudo

Palavras e frases frequentes

Referências a este livro

Counselling Skill
John McLeod
Pré-visualização indisponível - 2007

Acerca do autor (2004)

Léonie Sugarman is Senior Lecturer in Psychology at St Martin′s College, Lancaster

Informação bibliográfica