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COUNSELING PROCESS:Link to the Previous Lecture

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Theory and Practice of Counseling - PSY632
VU
Lesson 19
COUNSELING PROCESS
Link to the Previous Lecture
Table 1: Microskill Usage according to Theoretical
Orientation
Microskill
Client-center
Psychodynamic
Cognitive
Expression
Expression Questions
Expression
Attending &
Reflecting feeling
Behavioral/
Listening
cognitive
deficits
individual client
individual client
Individual and
Focus
We
Past
environment
Feedback
Interpretation
Directive
Influencing&
Reflection of
Advice
Challenging
meaning
Feedback
One of the main tasks of counseling is to assist clients to work through, resolve, or learn to live with
incongruities. Most counseling theories have as their main focus the resolution of incongruities. Reframes
from other theoretical approaches can also be helpful. Psychodynamic theory may be useful and can help
clients see how their histories and past experiences relate to their present stories. Cognitive-behavioral
reframes will often help clients think more effectively about their stories and provide action narratives for
the future. The existential-humanistic reframe may help clients focus on their self-value. The point of
reframing is to tell the story in a new way, one that is more functional and valuable to the client. The use of
various skills by different approaches is as under:
Attending and Listening skills:
Client-centered approach makes a minimum use of questions while the major emphasis is on reflecting
feelings. The therapist attempts to minimize influence on client's constructions and meanings. In
psychodynamic approach questions and encouragers are especially important to facilitate exploration or
unconscious processes. The cognitive approach focuses on noting cognitive distortions.
Focusing skills:
Client-centered approach focuses primarily on the individual client. The problem will often be conceptualized as
one
of
understanding
one's
own
unique
needs
and wishes. The major goal is self-actualization of the client. The psychodynamic focus is also on individual
client. The problem is to understand how past experience affects what occurs in the present. A major goal is
to understand unconscious mental processes.
Influencing skills:
All influencing skills are oriented in different ways toward the same objective: finding new ways to think
about, and then act on, old narratives and stories. Rogerian person-centered counseling employs very few
of these influencing skills. Cognitive-behavioral theory, however, uses an extensive array of influencing
change strategies. You as a professional counselor or therapist will want to find the balance and blend
listening and influencing that you believe to be most appropriate
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Theory and Practice of Counseling - PSY632
VU
Counseling Process
Factors Influencing the Counseling Process
In counseling process we will discuss factors affecting the counseling process. In addition to that, we will
study about the first interview, middle phase (working in a counseling relationship) and finally the last
interviews or termination of counseling process.
The counseling process is influenced by several characteristics that help it become a productive time for the
client and counselor. Not all characteristics apply to all situations, but generally, the following help bring
about positive results.
The process of counseling develops in definable stages with recognizable transitions. The first stage
involves building a relationship. It focuses on engaging clients to explore issues that directly affect them.
Two struggles take place at that time:
1. Battle for structure, which involves issues of administrative control, by counselor (scheduling, fees, and
participation in sessions)
2. Battle for initiative which concerns motivation for change and client responsibility. It is important that
the counselor wins the first battle and the client wins the second.
Let's discuss all of the important factors influencing counseling process:
·  Structure
·  Initiative
·  Setting
·  Client Qualities
·  Counselor Qualities
1. Structure
·  It refers to the "joint understanding between the counselor & client regarding the characteristics,
conditions, procedures, and parameters of counseling" (Day & Sparacio, 1980, p.246).
o  Structure helps clarify the counselor-client relationship. This give form to what the formal
process will look like.  Many clients come to counseling with no idea what to expect.
Counseling moves forward when client and counselor know the boundaries of the relationship
and what is expected.
o  Structure protects the rights, roles, and obligations of both client and counselor.
o  Practical guidelines are part of building structure. They include time limits, action limits,
procedural limits, specific goals and needs, fee, audio- or video-recording, permission to record,
etc. this is therapeutic in itself.
o  Structure is more important when a client has unrealistic expectation.
o  Structure is especially important in the beginning but is provided throughout all stages.
o  To help client new directions to their life, constructive guidelines are provided as clients are in
a static state.
o  The counselor needs to stay flexible and continually negotiate the nature of the structure with
their clients.
A sample client-counselor contract, provided by Witmer & Remley from University of Florida, is given
below to enhance students' understanding:
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Theory and Practice of Counseling - PSY632
VU
Example: Counselor-Client Contract: (Witmer & Remley, 1994)
Introduction: Our profession is becoming more attuned to client rights as well as to counselor
accountability. Both give their addresses here. Please feel free to change the contract......
·  Qualification/ Experience
·  Nature of counseling (the emphasis is on the professional relationship)
·  Referrals
·  Fee cancellation & insurance
·  Records & confidentiality
·  Signatures
2. Initiative, Reluctance & Resistance
Initiative can be thought of as the motivation that the client brings into the session.
Majority of the client are reluctant to some degrees. However, Reluctance is generally seen in those clients
who are referred for help by a third party and are unmotivated, e.g., school children, and court-referred
clients. In such a situation, some counselors become impatient, irritated and insensitive, and may ultimately
give up. Counselor needs to understand the dynamics involved in working with difficult clients.
Resistance is unwillingness to change. Resistant clients bring a motivation to cling to their issues through
various sorts of actions like those with "I don't know" statement. Resistant clients want to cling to the
certainty of present and do not want to face the pain that change demands.
Four broad categories of resistant clients (Otani, 1988):
Otani has pointed out 22 forms of resistance which can be categorized into 4, as described below:
·  Amount of verbalization: shown by silence and minimum talk.
·  Content of message: intellectual talk, emotional display, future/past preoccupation, symptom
preoccupation, etc.
·  Style of communication: false promising, thought editing, last-minute disclosure, externalization,
thought editing, false promising, etc.
·  Attitude toward counselor and counseling session: poor appointment keeping, payment delays, favor
asking, etc.
Ways to let client win the battle for initiative:
·
To anticipate the anger and defensiveness
·
To show acceptance and understanding
·
To use persuasion
·
Through confrontation; client can respond by:
o  Denial
o  Accepting confrontation as true
o  Developing a middle position.
·
Using pragmatic techniques: Roloff and Miller have mentioned two pragmatic persuasion techniques:
door in the face, and foot in the door. Other pragmatic techniques could be silence, reflection,
questioning, sharing, etc.
3. Physical Setting
·  Counseling can happen anywhere, but a professional counselor generally prefers to work in a place that
provides privacy, confidentiality, and quietness.
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Theory and Practice of Counseling - PSY632
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·
There is no universal quality that a room should have "except it should not be overwhelming, noisy, or
distracting" (Benjamin, 1987, p. 3). Room should facilitate rather than distracting the client. In this
reference, Shertzer & Stone (1980) indicated that the room should be comfortable and attractive.
·
Features of a counseling room:
o  Soft lighting
o  Quiet colors
o  An absence of clutter
o  Harmonious and comfortable furniture
o  The spatial features of the environment;
Optimum distance: A distance of 30-39 inch between counselor and client has been
found to be the average range of comfort.
Desk: Pietrofesa et al. (1984) note the symbolic and physical barrier of a large desk.
Auditory and visual privacy is mandatory for maximum client-disclosure.
4. Physical Arrangement
·  Different layouts of the therapy office
Cultural and gender preferences may exist, but individual differences are the most important variation to
observe. Positioning is expressed by the clinician in the layout of the therapy office.
o  a large desk is positioned between client and clinician
o  a small desk is positioned between client and clinician
o  the clients and clinicians chairs are directly across from each other without obstacles in
between
·  Arrangement of chairs should be arranged in relation to each other
o  face-to-face arrangements
o  side-by-side seating
A therapy office that is set up so that a desk is positioned between client and clinician will communicate
something very different from a therapy room in which the clients and clinicians chairs are directly across
from each other without obstacles in between. Similarly, the decision about how a client's and counselor's
chairs should be arranged in relation to each other communicates different things to different clients. For
some, face-to-face arrangements may suggest an attempt at emotional sharing; for others, only side-by-side
seating may be acceptable. Benjamin (1987) suggests two chairs and a nearby table. Observation about how
clients react to the layout may be helpful in making necessary revisions
5. Client Qualities
·  Clients come in all shapes and sizes, personality characteristics, and degrees of attractiveness (Warnath,
1977). Counselors' interaction is influenced by the physical characteristics of the client (Goldstein,
1973)
·  The most successful clients tend to be YAVIS (Young, attractive, verbal, intelligent, successful)
compared to HOUNDs (homely, old, unintelligent, nonverbal, and disadvantaged), or DUDs (dumb,
unintelligent and disadvantaged).
·  These observations show that ironically disability and age provide invisible but powerful barriers.
·  Total liking is determined by verbal, vocal, and facial liking. However, in a study nonverbal behavior
was shown to be more important (Facial expressions = 55%) than either vocal (38%) or verbal (7%)
cues (Mehrabian et al., 1971).
·  Counselors generally like to work with clients who are most like them. It is important to be aware of
cultural differences in nonverbal messages (Sielska, 1979)
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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