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GOALS & ACTIVITIES GOALS OF COUNSELING:Facilitating Behavior Change

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Theory and Practice of Counseling - PSY632
VU
Lesson 05
GOALS & ACTIVITIES
GOALS OF COUNSELING
This section will elaborate on the expected results or goals from counseling. The ultimate decision about the
goals must rest with the client and counselor as a team.
Criteria for Judging Goals
Krumboltz (1966) identifies the following criteria for judging the effectiveness of counseling goals:
·  Goals capable of being stated differently for each client
·  Compatible with values of the counselor
·  The degree of attainment of goals should be observable
A few important goals of counseling are as under:
·  Facilitating behavior change
·  Enhancing coping skills
·  Promoting decision making
·  Improving relationships
·  Facilitating the client's potential
Facilitating Behavior Change
·  Rogers (1961) sees behavior change as a necessary result of counseling process, although specific
behaviors receive little emphasis during the counseling experience.
·  Dustin and George (1971), on the other hand, suggest that the counselor must establish specific
counseling goals.
·  Almost all theorists agree to bring about a change in behavior enabling the client to live a more
productive and satisfying life. They believe that the specific goals make both understand the
specific change.
Enhancing Coping Skills
·  Few people completely achieve developmental tasks.
·  Inconsistency of significant others can result in ineffective learning in children.
·  New interpersonal or occupational role demands may create an overload and excessive anxiety.
·  Counselor helps individuals to cope effectively.
Promoting Decision Making
·  Counselor just promotes not makes decisions. Counselor provides information, clarifies and sorts
out personal characteristics and emotions, and even attitudes affecting decision making.
·  The client learns to estimate the probable consequences in personal sacrifice, time, energy, money,
risk, and the like.
·  One question emerges from the points discussed above that if client has the major responsibility of
improving himself/ herself, then where does the counselor fit in? The answer to this question is
that client works as a facilitator for the client and provides a safe and comfortable environment
where the client will perceive the counselor as a trustworthy person and will be able to share his
problems with the counselor. In this kind of therapeutic atmosphere, the client will be able to find
the solutions of his problems himself/herself.
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Theory and Practice of Counseling - PSY632
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Improving Relationships
·  Many people have problems relating to others as much of our life is spent in social interactions.
Bowlby's attachment theory states that children of insecure and rejecting parents establish their
adult relationships differently than those of secure and understanding parents.
·  This problem can be due to "poor self image", "unstable self-esteem", or "inadequate social skills"
·  Counselor strives to helps improve quality of relationships. Sometimes counselor improves
relationships by improving client counselor relationship.
Facilitating the Client's Potential
·  The counselor attempts to promote the client's growth by improving personal effectiveness and
skills like interpersonal relationships and problematic behaviors like smoking, eating, drinking,
shyness, anxiety, and depression.
·  Blocher (1966) suggests that:
o  First counselor maximizes an individual's possible freedom within limitations.
o  Second, counselor seeks to maximize a client's effectiveness promoted by giving him
control over the environment.
Qualification & Training of Counselor
·  Three levels of training:
o  First: Appropriate educational and/ or experience background.
o  Second: Master's degree: According to the British Association for Counselors, Master's
different learning modules should be two third of the course, whereas rest of the part can
be dissertation, usually of 20,000 words.
o  Third: Doctorate degree (180 training institutions in US and Canada).
·
Core areas of study in counseling are:
o  Professional identity
o  Social and cultural diversity
o  Human growth and development
o  Career development
o  Helping relationships
o  Group work
o  Assessment
o  Research and program evaluation
·
Accreditation is a part of the process of post-training of counseling. The Official approval is taken
by different professional bodies, e.g., BAC, APA, and ACA.
·
BAC requires 450 hours supervised client work: 200 hours of skill development and 250 hours of
theory.
·
A license to practice is to ensure the accountability (referral & consultation) and is usually the
requirement of different organizations seeking counselors' services.
Work Activities of Counselors
Certain activities have evolved for counselors across all settings. First 5 are traditional or basic activities,
later these were expanded to referral, etc. The rest of the activities were added to the list later.
·  Individual assessment
·  Individual counseling
·  Group counseling and guidance
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Career Assistance
·
Placement and follow up
·
Referral
·
Consultation
·
Research
·
Evaluation
·
Accountability
·
Prevention
Individual Assessment & Counseling
·  Individual assessment and counselling is considered as a primary skill of the counsellor. It seeks,
systematically, to identify the characteristics and potential of every client by using standardized
tests, observation and self-reporting techniques like autobiography. Sometime a counselor can also
consult other professionals in this field like psychometrics, etc.
·  Individual counseling is the core activity through which all the other activities become meaningful
with counseling being one-to-one helping relationship. It is a client-centred approach that demands
confidentiality and it is initiated when a relationship is established between the counselor and the
client.
Effective counseling requires:
1. Training and skills,
2. Certain personality traits,
3. Counseling will suffer from credibility unless counselor exhibits core traits.
Group Counseling and Guidance
·  Groups have become popular for providing organized assistance to individuals for a wide range of
needs e.g., to drug abuse, to families for understanding and coping. They may include task groups
or psycho educational groups.
Group Counseling:
·  Focuses on assisting counselees to cope with their day-to-day adjustment and developmental
concerns.
·  More popular in agency and institutional settings.
Group Guidance:
·  The activities of group guidance are educational, vocational, career, personal, or social.
·  Groups are designed with a goal of providing students and employees the accurate information.
·  More likely to be found in schools/colleges to provide information for career or educational
understanding for personal and social growth, adjustment and development, personal relationship
skills, etc.
Career Assistance
·  Providing career assistance to clients with dramatic changes taking place in the world of work.
·  Providing counselling not at selected stages in life's development, but across the entire life span.
·  Technological advancements impact the ways counsellors provide career assistance and information
to their clients.
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Moreover, criteria of promotions and selections do vary with the passage of time, for example, in
Pakistan promotion is now contingent on person's work, qualification and research. Hence, the
counsellor shall be aware of these changes so rapidly taking place in the work environment.
·
Counselling profession is called upon to renew and update its efforts in one of its traditional areas
of service by paying attention to latest changes like internet use, computer based assessment tools,
programs, distance learning, and interactive learning systems.
Placement & Follow-up
·  Educational placement in courses and programs has been a traditional service of school
counselling. The concerns for youth employment in 1990 in USA resulted in increased attention to
second placement service and to match students with type of work, seeking part time or full time
jobs.
·  Follow-up activities are a way to assess the effectiveness of a program's placement activities.
Referral
The counsellor also refers clients to appropriate counsellors or agencies if required.
Consultation
It is a process for helping a client through a third party or helping a system improves its services to its
clientele. Counsellors are used as a consultant to teachers and parents. They are also consulted to
prevent severe mental illness, mostly in agency settings.
Research
Research is necessary for the advancement of counselling profession. It can provide empirically based
data relevant to different goals of counselling.
Evaluation
Evaluation is the process for assessing the effectiveness of counsellor's activities.
Prevention
·  It is the most attractive alternative to traditional mental health practices and seeks to prevent the
occurrence of the disorder in the first place. Home and school are the first social institutions that
shape early adaptation and influence early human development. Accordingly, primary intervention
strategies can be initiated to educate parents and teachers. The counsellors also work in close
alliance with medical doctors to promote both physical and mental well-being.
·  The current trends are to focus on the holistic approach to counselling which embodies the
dimensions of body, mind, spirit and emotions.
Where Counsellors Work?
·  Educational institutions: At the turn of 20th century, there were no counsellors in US schools.
However, after more than 100 years, more than 125,000 school counselors are now working in
USA.
·  Rehabilitation centres, e.g., working with disabled; the rehabilitation counselors are specialized in
dealing with developmental issues.
·  Industry
·  Community or various agency settings
·  Rehabilitation centres
·  Private practice
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Marriage and family counseling centres
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Table of Contents:
  1. INTRODUCTION:Counseling Journals, Definitions of Counseling
  2. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND COUNSELING & PSYCHOTHERAPY
  3. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND 1900-1909:Frank Parson, Psychopathic Hospitals
  4. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND:Recent Trends in Counseling
  5. GOALS & ACTIVITIES GOALS OF COUNSELING:Facilitating Behavior Change
  6. ETHICAL & LEGAL ISSUES IN COUNSELING:Development of Codes
  7. ETHICAL & LEGAL ISSUES IN COUNSELING:Keeping Relationships Professional
  8. EFFECTIVE COUNSELOR:Personal Characteristics Model
  9. EFFECTIVE COUNSELOR:Humanism, People Orientation, Intellectual Curiosity
  10. EFFECTIVE COUNSELOR:Cultural Bias in Theory and Practice, Stress and Burnout
  11. COUNSELING SKILLS:Microskills, Body Language & Movement, Paralinguistics
  12. COUNSELING SKILLS COUNSELOR’S NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION:Use of Space
  13. COUNSELING SKILLS HINTS TO MAINTAIN CONGRUENCE:
  14. LISTENING & UNDERSTANDING SKILLS:Barriers to an Accepting Attitude
  15. LISTENING & UNDERSTANDING SKILLS:Suggestive Questions,
  16. LISTENING & UNDERSTANDING SKILLS:Tips for Paraphrasing, Summarizing Skills
  17. INFLUENCING SKILLS:Basic Listening Sequence (BLS), Interpretation/ Reframing
  18. FOCUSING & CHALLENGING SKILLS:Focused and Selective Attention, Family focus
  19. COUNSELING PROCESS:Link to the Previous Lecture
  20. COUNSELING PROCESS:The Initial Session, Counselor-initiated, Advice Giving
  21. COUNSELING PROCESS:Transference & Counter-transference
  22. THEORY IN THE PRACTICE OF COUNSELING:Timing of Termination
  23. PSYCHOANALYTIC APPROACHES TO COUNSELING:View of Human Nature
  24. CLASSICAL PSYCHOANALYTIC APPROACH:Psychic Determination, Anxiety
  25. NEO-FREUDIANS:Strengths, Weaknesses, NEO-FREUDIANS, Family Constellation
  26. NEO-FREUDIANS:Task setting, Composition of Personality, The Shadow
  27. NEO-FREUDIANS:Ten Neurotic Needs, Modes of Experiencing
  28. CLIENT-CENTERED APPROACH:Background of his approach, Techniques
  29. GESTALT THERAPY:Fritz Perls, Causes of Human Difficulties
  30. GESTALT THERAPY:Role of the Counselor, Assessment
  31. EXISTENTIAL THERAPY:Rollo May, Role of Counselor, Logotherapy
  32. COGNITIVE APPROACHES TO COUNSELING:Stress-Inoculation Therapy
  33. COGNITIVE APPROACHES TO COUNSELING:Role of the Counselor
  34. TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS:Eric Berne, The child ego state, Transactional Analysis
  35. BEHAVIORAL APPROACHES:Respondent Learning, Social Learning Theory
  36. BEHAVIORAL APPROACHES:Use of reinforcers, Maintenance, Extinction
  37. REALITY THERAPY:Role of the Counselor, Strengths, Limitations
  38. GROUPS IN COUNSELING:Major benefits, Traditional & Historical Groups
  39. GROUPS IN COUNSELING:Humanistic Groups, Gestalt Groups
  40. MARRIAGE & FAMILY COUNSELING:Systems Theory, Postwar changes
  41. MARRIAGE & FAMILY COUNSELING:Concepts Related to Circular Causality
  42. CAREER COUNSELING:Situational Approaches, Decision Theory
  43. COMMUNITY COUNSELING & CONSULTING:Community Counseling
  44. DIAGNOSIS & ASSESSMENT:Assessment Techniques, Observation
  45. FINAL OVERVIEW:Ethical issues, Influencing skills, Counseling Approaches