Abstract
Psychological Counseling or Counseling Psychology is one of the main branches
of psychology. Counseling which helps a client to understand the true nature of
a problem through a scientific process consists of many steps and processes.
For an effective psychological counseling, the counselor should have counseling
skills and qualities. Those counseling skills and qualities are considered as major
characteristics of a counselor. Here, in this assignment, I would like to take
an effort to explain what is meant by psychological counseling and also I would
like to point out the counseling skills and qualities that a counselor should
develop.
Introduction
According to the American Counselling
Association, counselling is the application of mental health, psychological or
human development principles, through cognitive, affective, behavioural or
systemic interventions, strategies that address wellness, personal growth, or
career development, as well as pathology (www.psycholog.about.com). Counseling is a service
offered to the individual who is undergoing a problem and needs professional
help to overcome it. The problem keeps him or her disturbed high strung and
under tension and unless solved his or her development is hampered or stunted.
Counseling, therefore, is a more specialized service requiring training in
personality development and handling exceptional groups of individuals.
Counseling mainly deals with the
wellness, personal growth, career and pathological concerns (Conger,1996). This part
of the definition suggests that counselors work with both intra- and
interpersonal concerns in areas that include schools, families, careers etc.
Though many people think
counseling as primarily an advice-giving activity, counseling is completely
different from advice giving. Understanding another person’ complicated life is
almost impossible. Also, advice giving may breed a relationship in which the
counselee feels inferior and emotionally dependent on the counselor. In spite
of its ills, advice giving occurs in routine counseling sessions because
counselees expect it and counselors tend to provide it.
For being a good counselor, a
counselor should have counseling qualities and skills. Skills are abilities or
capabilities that a counselor should develop and qualities mean distinctive
attribute or characteristic that a counselor should develop. Sometimes
counseling skills and qualities are equal.
Qualities of a Good Counselor
The personal and professional qualities of counselors are very important in facilitating any helping relationship. A counselor must be well equipped to assist individuals to make adjustments and live a happy and harmonious life. The adjustment can be with regard to the workplace and curriculum, vocation and personality.
The personal and professional qualities of counselors are very important in facilitating any helping relationship. A counselor must be well equipped to assist individuals to make adjustments and live a happy and harmonious life. The adjustment can be with regard to the workplace and curriculum, vocation and personality.
When considering the skills
of a counselor, there are a lot of counseling skills that a counselor has to
develop.
When considering the
multicultural competency following skills are important. The counselor should demonstrates
the ability to adapt counseling approaches, theories, and techniques to make
them culturally appropriate for diverse populations. In the same way, he or she
should have a knowledge and awareness of the importance of individual
differences in race, culture, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, and
disability, and the ability to work effectively with a broad range of individuals
from diverse backgrounds. Further, he or she should
possess an
awareness of a) their own cultural world views/values, and b) any biases held
toward other racial and ethnic minority groups. The counselor should be aware
of
sociopolitical influences on race, ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation,
including issues of immigration, poverty, racism, stereotyping, and
powerlessness.
When considering the
scientist-practitioner model following skills should be develop by a counselor.
The counselor should know
evidence-based practices and basic strategies for evaluating the counseling process
and outcome in counseling and he or she should have a knowledge and
understanding of methods of research and investigation for the purpose of
keeping abreast of current developments in the field to insure the
effectiveness of workplace programs and counseling outcome.
Ethical practice is also a very important field that a
counselor should know. Under ethical practice
following are important. The counselor should demonstrates the ability to apply and adhere to ethical
and legal standards in counseling. He or she should have a knowledge and
understanding of one’s self and his or her impact upon the counseling process
in order to deliver ethical and effective services (i.e., the American
Counseling Association, the American School Counselors Association), and by
current legal precedent. Further, the counselor should demonstrates the ability to recognize
one’s own limitations as a counselor and to seek supervision or refer clients
when appropriate.
When considering systemic
perspective of development following skills should be developed by a
counselor. He or she should
- Recognize the importance of family, social networks, and community systems in the treatment of mental and/or emotional disorders.
- Demonstrate appropriate application of culturally responsive treatments such as, individual, couple, family, and group in schools and community agencies for initiating, maintaining, and terminating counseling.
- Recognize the importance of the role of the counselor as an agent of social change and possesses skills to implement change.
- Demonstrate an awareness of systemic inequalities.
When considering professional competency, the counselor
should demonstrate a
high level of interpersonal skills such as the ability to respectfully
communicate opinions with colleagues. And he or she demonstrates the
ability to receive and apply feedback from supervisors and colleagues. In the
same way, the counselor should demonstrates ability to provide
appropriate feedback to others.
When considering counseling competency following
skills are important. A counselor should
- Demonstrates effective delivery and use of counseling skills.
- Demonstrates a cognitively complex understanding of client problems and the counseling process.
- Demonstrates competent treatment delivery.
- Demonstrates the ability to establish working therapeutic relationships
- Demonstrates and applies knowledge of counseling theories and approaches.
Apart from above
mentioned skills, there are most important counseling skills that counselor
should develop.
Counseling Skills. There are several
important skills which we will cover briefly.
Each is considered a “micro-skill” which you will need to develop during
the clinical sequence of the counselor training program
One of the most important counseling
skills is the empathy. This is a very important and major skills and a quality
of the counselor.
According to humanistic
psychologist Carl Rogers (1961) empathy is
the ability to enter the client’s phenomenological world, to experience
the client’s world as if it were your own without ever losing the ‘as if’
quality. Empathy involves two specific skills: Perception or understanding of
what is taking place emotionally and the ability to communicate your
understanding of that to your client. Humanistic psychologist give a very
important palce to empathy.
According to Martin (1983)
empathy is communicated understanding of the other person’s intended emotional
message. Every word counts in this
definition. It is not enough to understand
what the person said; you must also hear what they meant to say; the
intended message. According to him, it
is not enough to understand, even deeply; you must communicate your
understanding somehow. It is absolutely
essential the other person “feel” understood—that your understanding is
perceived.
There are two forms of
empathy. They are primary empathy and advanced empathy. Primary empathy means
responding in such a way that it is apparent to both the client & counselor
the counselor has understood the client’s major themes while advanced empathy
takes the relationship one step further.
You are exploring themes, issues, meanings, and emotions that are below
the surface of what is being shared by the client.
When considering the levels of empathy we can find several levels of
empathy.
Throughout counselor’s time with a client, counselor has to use
different levels of empathy. As the
sessions progress, empathy will deepen as the counselor know more about client
and their story. You also use an
appropriate level of empathy for the stage of counseling.
·
The
verbal & behavioral expressions of the counselor either do not attend to or
detract from the verbal & behavioral expressions of the client.
·
Although
the counselor responds to the expressed feelings of the client, they do so in a
way which subtracts noticeable affect (emotion) from the communications of the
client.
·
The
expressions of the counselor in response to the expressions of the client are
essentially interchangeable.
·
The
response of the counselor add noticeably to the expressions of the client in a
way that expresses feelings a level deeper than the client was able to express
·
The
counselor’s responses add significantly to the feeling & meaning of the
expressions of the client in a way that accurately expresses feeling levels
below what the client is able to express.
Moving the Client—Leading-This is a very important skill of the counselor.
There are several ways to “lead” the client forward in a session. They include using silence, acceptance, paraphrasing
etc. Here, the counselor should be aware of how he or she leads and where he or
she is going. The counselor should
clearly understand that he or she is working on the client’s issues, not his or
her issues, or what he or she think the client should be working
on.
Responding Styles-Counseling
is often perceived as just focusing on feelings. This is not true. While counseling helps people work through feelings; how one responds
and communicates with others will affect how the counselor responds to the
client.
In affective responding, the counselor should focus on the client’s
feelings, behavioral responses, actions and behaviors, cognitive response, on
thoughts and cognitions.
The counselor should be able to balance these throughout the session
with a client.
Self-Disclosure- Self-disclosure is making oneself known to
another person (the client) by revealing personal information. Counselor’s self-disclosure is only necessary
as it relates to the therapeutic process.
Too much self-disclosure hinders the counseling process, while not
enough, may inhibit the client from forming a bond with the counselor.
Self-disclosure is the
process by which one person lets his or her inner being, thoughts, and emotions
be known to another (Mosby) and is an area in which a wide range of opinions
exists. Typically, self-disclosure happens when we initially meet someone and
continues as we build and develop the relationship.
Within the
Person-Centered approach to counseling, Carl
Rogers urged therapists to be genuine. Congruence was one
of the six conditions that he believed were necessary and sufficient for
personality to change. As well as empathy and unconditional positive regard
(acceptance) he believed congruence to be highly important. Assuming the
counselor uses Rogers' core conditions, the counselor will be concentrating on
establishing an atmosphere which invites intimacy and in order for a true
therapeutic relationship to develop counselor and client must achieve some
level of intimacy (Mearns and Thorne 1998).
However, on the
positive side, Dale et al. (1998) found that a counselor’s self disclosure can
assist a client to open up, provide reassurance and hope that understanding and
recovery is possible. Similarly, Egan (1982) believes that self-disclosure is a
challenging skill and can be seen as a form of modeling for the client. The
client can observe a method of self-disclosure and be encouraged to do so
himself. Self awareness is vital in the therapist, as is effective use of the
supervision process “which can help them resolve their own issues and to avoid
burnout in what is an emotionally draining occupation” (Geldard etc al 2009)
Immediacy-This
involves a counselor’s understanding and communicating of what is going on
between the counselor and client within the helping relationship. There are 2 types:
© Relationship immediacy. (Between client & counselor)
© “Here & Now” immediacy focuses on some particular
event in the session.
Humor is a
also a good skill of the counselor. Humor can have a positive effect on the
counseling process when used properly. However, it must be used with sensitivity and timing. It does not demean and is supportive. It
should be understood that A session is
not a time to try out a new joke heard at lunch.
Confrontation
Actually, this is not a skill at putting the
client down for doing something wrong. This is an invitation to the client to look more closely at behavior
that is not working or interfering with growth, change, or healthy functioning.
Confrontation is when the counselor
raises the awareness of the client to include information that the client is
overlooking, or failing to identify. This technique must be used carefully, as
it can lead to a complete disintegration of the client-counselor relationship.
On the other hand, good confrontation can be seen as respectful to the client,
as it shows that the counselor is sincerely listening, and cares for the
client. There are a number of situations where confrontation is appropriate.
These include:
The client is avoiding a basic issue that appears to be troubling them
The client is failing to recognize their own self-destructive or
self-defeating behavior
The client is failing to recognize possible serious consequences of their
behavior
The client is making self-contradictory statements.
However, it should be noted that if other
non-confrontational skills and techniques are properly used, it is said that
the counselor will generally not have to use confrontation as a method of
gaining information from the client (Geldard & Geldard, 2009). Good
confrontation often includes a summary, followed by a statement of the
counselor’s feelings and a concrete statement given without interpretation.
Good confrontation leaves the client feeling OK and not attacked.
Before the counselor confronts someone you want to make sure the
relationship is strong and able to withstand the challenge of the
confrontation.
Example: “You have said you want
to change this behavior but it seems you keep doing it over and over again. Help me to understand what is going on and
how repeating this pattern is helpful to you.”
Transference & Counter-transference
This is a very old concept. But, it is a very important concept. Transference
and counter transference are issues that affect all forms of counseling,
guidance and psychotherapy
Transference
This is the client’s projection of past or present feelings, attitudes,
or desires onto the counselor. It can be
direct or indirect and will cause the client to react to you as they would in
the past or present relationship
Counter-transference.
This is the counselor’s projected emotional reaction to or behavior
towards the client. It can take on many
forms, from a desire to please the client, to wanting to develop a social or
sexual relationship with the client.
When this happens, supervision or counseling for the counselor is called
for.
Termination of a Session
Actually, there is no great secret to ending sessions. There are some
guidelines.
© Starting and ending on time.
© Leaving five minutes or so for a summary of
the session.
© Introducing the end of the session normally saying
like “Our time is coming to a close.”
© Assigning homework.
© Setting up next appointment.
Termination of the Relationship
This termination is the end of the professional relationship with the
client when the session goals have been met.
A formal termination serves three functions:
© Counseling is finished and it is time for the
client to face their life challenges.
© Changes which have taken place have
generalized into the normal behavior of the client.
© The client has matured and thinks and acts
more effectively and independently.
Timing of Termination
There is no one answer when termination is to take place. Questions you may wish to ask yourself
concerning termination include:
© Have clients achieved behavioral, cognitive,
or affective goals?
© Can clients concretely show where they have
made progress in what they wanted to accomplish?
© Is the counseling relationship helpful?
© Has the context of the initial counseling
arrangements changed?
Resistance to Termination
When considering the resistance to
termination in some cases, clients and counselors may not want counseling to
end. In many cases this may be the
result of feelings about the loss and grief or insecurities of losing the
relationship. For clients, this is
something to process. For counselors,
this is an issue for supervision.
Premature Termination
This has two sides. When we take the client, we can see that many clients
may end counseling before all goals are completed. This can be seen by not
making appointments, resisting new appointments, etc. It is a good idea to try
and schedule a termination or review session with the client so closure may
take place. At this time a referral may
be in order. When considering the counselor’s side, at times, counselors have
to end counseling prematurely. Whatever
the reason for the termination, a summary session is in order and referrals are
made, if appropriate, to another counselor.
Referrals
Sometimes, a counselor needs to make a referral. When this is done,
specific issues need to be addressed with the client like
© Reason for the referral.
© Note specific behaviors or actions which
brought the need for a referral.
© Have the names of several other counselors
ready for referral.
© You cannot follow up with the new counselor
to see if the client followed through (Confidentiality issue).
Follow-Up
At times, a follow-up may be scheduled for
various reasons including evaluation, research, or checking-in with client. Follow-ups need to be scheduled so as to not
take the responsibility of change away from the client.
Genuineness -This
means being real.
Having a sense of humor - we put our guard down. In a sense we become
genuine
Unconditional Positive Regard - Acceptance
A warm regard for her/him as a person of unconditional self-worth--of
value no matter what his/her condition, his/her behavior, or his/her feelings.
Warmth-Physical
expression of understanding and caring. It is ordinarily communicated
nonverbally through gestures, posture, tone of voice, touch, and facial
expressions
Active listening happens when the counselor "listen
for meaning." The listener says very little but conveys empathy,
acceptance and genuineness.
Developing encouraging body language can take some
practice. Normaly, communication is 55% body language, 38% tone and 7% words.
Asking questions - open and closed - is an important tool
in the counseling kit. They can help a person open up or close them down.
Paraphrasing is when you, the listener, restate
succinctly and tentatively what the speaker said - conveying empathy,
acceptance and genuineness.
A summary, in counseling, is when you focus on the main
points of a presentation or session in order to highlight them.
Note taking is the practice of writing down pieces of
information, often in a shorthand and messy manner.
Homework in counseling is fun and informative work done
outside of the session. It extends the length of the session and increases
progress.
The goodie bag and other fun stuff help make a counseling
session an occasion for joy, as well as understanding.
As the process of
counseling develops, both the counselor and counselee must arrive at a common ground.
Counselor’s who continually develop their self awareness skills are in touch
with their values, thoughts and feelings. They are likely to have a clear
perception of their own and their client’s needs and accurately assess both.
Such awareness can help them be honest with themselves and others. They are
able to be more congruent and build trust simultaneously. Counselors who
possess this type of knowledge are most likely to communicate clearly
accurately.
Three other
characteristics that make counselors initially more influential are perceived
expertness, attractiveness and trustworthiness. Expertness is the degree to
which a counselor is perceived as knowledge able and informed about his or her
specialty. Counselors who display certificates and diplomas in their offices
are usually perceived as more credible than those who do not and as a result,
are likely to be effective. Clients went to work with counselor who appears to
know profession well.
Attractiveness is function of perceived similarity between a client and counselor. Councilors can make themselves attractive by speaking in clear, simple, jargon free sentence and offering appropriate self disclosure.
Attractiveness is function of perceived similarity between a client and counselor. Councilors can make themselves attractive by speaking in clear, simple, jargon free sentence and offering appropriate self disclosure.
Actually, a counselor should have a magnetic
personality, personal adjustment, interpersonal relationship, professional
competence, leadership, professional dedication, philosophy of life, wide range
of interest.
Counselors who are
nonverbal cues in responding to clients, such as more nodding and eye contacts
are seen as more attractive than those do not. The attire of the counselor also
make a differences, clothes should be clean, neat and professional looking but
not call attention to themselves. Trustworthiness is related to the sincerity
and consisting of the counselor. The counselor is genuinely concerned about the
client and shows it over time by establishing a close relationship with the
client. “There is and can be no such thing as instant intimacy” or
trustworthiness. Rather, both are generated through patterns of behavior that
demonstrate are and concern most clients are neither completely distrusting nor
given to blind trust. But, as Fong and Cox note, many clients test the
trustworthiness of the counselor, deprecating themselves or questioning the
motives and dedication the counselor.
It is essential, therefore, that the counselor responds to the question of trust rather than the verbal content of the client in order to facilitate the counseling relationship. Many beginning counselors make the mistake of dealing with surface issues instead of real concerns. For example if a client asks a counselor, “Can I feel you anything”. A novice counselor might respond, “what do you mean by anything”? An experienced counselor might say, it sounds as if you are uncertain about whether you can really trust me and this relationship. A good counselor must have the knowledge of mental hygiene and the skill to interpret psychological tests. This is essential to from a correct, reliable and objective assessment of the personality of the counselee.
An important quality of a counselor is that he like and respects himself, but he does not use the counselee to satisfy his own needs. Every normal human being has a desire to be respected, recognized and accepted. Then the counselor must qualities of good personality, good character and wholesome philosophy, health, emotional stability, approachability, sympatric understanding of youth, intelligence, social culture, broad knowledge and interest in guidance and personal working conditions and understanding of social economic conditions. They above given qualities must be possessed by a counselor.
It is essential, therefore, that the counselor responds to the question of trust rather than the verbal content of the client in order to facilitate the counseling relationship. Many beginning counselors make the mistake of dealing with surface issues instead of real concerns. For example if a client asks a counselor, “Can I feel you anything”. A novice counselor might respond, “what do you mean by anything”? An experienced counselor might say, it sounds as if you are uncertain about whether you can really trust me and this relationship. A good counselor must have the knowledge of mental hygiene and the skill to interpret psychological tests. This is essential to from a correct, reliable and objective assessment of the personality of the counselee.
An important quality of a counselor is that he like and respects himself, but he does not use the counselee to satisfy his own needs. Every normal human being has a desire to be respected, recognized and accepted. Then the counselor must qualities of good personality, good character and wholesome philosophy, health, emotional stability, approachability, sympatric understanding of youth, intelligence, social culture, broad knowledge and interest in guidance and personal working conditions and understanding of social economic conditions. They above given qualities must be possessed by a counselor.
Counselor need to be able to put himself or herself
in the other person's shoes, and, at the end of the day, you'd have to be able
to shrug off the issues that people give you so that you don't go insane himself
or herself .
At the same time, a counselor needs a deep level of empathy and understanding. A counselor need to be happy in himself or herself - if you aren't, your patients will see this and they will lose hope.
At the same time, a counselor needs a deep level of empathy and understanding. A counselor need to be happy in himself or herself - if you aren't, your patients will see this and they will lose hope.
Counselor needs to be understanding. He or she need
to be willing to let yourself go into an unstable mind, pretend to be them, and
understand -why- they are thinking that way, and a possible way out. And he or
she needs to be flexible, and at the same time orderly enough for them to not
be spooked by unpredictability. In the same way, counselor needs to be able to
think outside the box - because chances are, they've already tried
inside-the-box solutions to their problems - and be able to conjure up many
solutions.
Counselor needs to learn when to have faith in your patient's ideas and when to tell them to stop. Counselor 'll face many tough decisions - do I hospitalize this person, or do I keep an eye on them as they are? - and many you may come to regret, as the human mind is unpredictable.
Above all, the counselor needs to listen. -Listen- to them, to what clients say, and understand why they are saying what they are saying. Learn to read their body language, become very observant - are they taking care of their bodies? What are they wearing? (What one is wearing tells a lot about a person.) Are they slouched in their chair, do they speak, if so, is their voice loud and clear or shy and quiet?
Counselor needs to learn when to have faith in your patient's ideas and when to tell them to stop. Counselor 'll face many tough decisions - do I hospitalize this person, or do I keep an eye on them as they are? - and many you may come to regret, as the human mind is unpredictable.
Above all, the counselor needs to listen. -Listen- to them, to what clients say, and understand why they are saying what they are saying. Learn to read their body language, become very observant - are they taking care of their bodies? What are they wearing? (What one is wearing tells a lot about a person.) Are they slouched in their chair, do they speak, if so, is their voice loud and clear or shy and quiet?
Empathic listening is a simple skill
(although it takes a lot of practice) that will help you improve your
communication at any point in your relationship. It requires each partner to
take time to reflect back what the other has said, and make sure you’ve
understood correctly before making your response. When you truly understand
your partner’s concerns your response will be more constructive. Too often,
we’re busy preparing our response to someone before we’ve fully heard and
understood what they are saying. As Fran Lebowitz put it, “The opposite of
talking isn't listening. The opposite of talking is waiting.”
© Empathy You want to build the relationship with the client
through all the previously mentioned skills.
Yet all these skills will be hindered without the use of empathy.
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