Transcript
Page 1: Basic counselling skills

Basic Counselling Skills

Dr D.S. Satpute

Sandeep Sinha

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Counselling ProcessPreparatory Stage :

Attitudes : Respect Genuineness Empathy

Attending

Skills : Social Skills : Greeting,

Politeness & kindness Attending physically Observing Listening

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Empathy It is the ability to stand in the other person’s shoes –

to see the world as they see it We can try to drop our own preconceptions & listen to

the other person in order to enter their frame of reference

We can never empathise completely

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Genuineness It is the most basic element in the helping relationship The counsellor must be himself, if he is to succeed It is the only way a counsellor can convincingly

convey warmth to the counsellee

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Attending Physically Sit facing counsellee Lean forward Make eye-contact Avoid distracting behaviors

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Observing Physically : Body build, physical appearance, level of

energy Emotionally : Facial expressions, posture, grooming Interpersonally : Positive, negative, neutral

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Listening Know what you are listening for Listen for the specifics Don’t judge Resist distractions Recall tone of voice, feeling words

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Counselling ProcessFirst Stage :Attitudes : Respect Genuineness Empathy Concreteness Self Disclosure

RespondingSkills : Responding to contents Responding to feelings &

contents Responding with questions Making summary responses End this stage with a neat

summary of the dominant feelings & their reasons,& get it checked by the counsellee

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Concreteness It is the ability to get to listen to what the other person

is saying & to stick with what is being said rather than what is implied

The counsellor accepts what the client says at face value & does not interpret or try to read between the lines

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Self – Disclosure Counsellor shares his personal positive feelings,

attitudes, opinions & experiences with the counsellee This does not mean that he dominates the

interchange with autobiographical data

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Mistakes in formulating Responses Responses that are too long Responses that show more concern for the facts Responses that are vague & generalized Responses that are leading & directive Responses that are overly supportive & reassuring

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Steps to formulate an Effective Response Listen sensitively to the total message coming from

the other person. The empathy question that should guide us “ What is he feeling to say what he says the way he says it”

Identify the core experience of the other, revealed in his verbal & non-verbal communication

Formulate a response , incorporating feeling –words by the formula “ You are feeling….because…

Convey that we do understand & respect his experience by our own verbals & non-verbals

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Language of Feelings (Counselee’s Statement)

“I have put up with this nonsense from him for all these years, but this is absolutely the last straw”

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Language of Cognition (Counselor’s Response)

“ You are simply furious with him”

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Language of Feelings (Counselee’s Statement)

“ I can’t stand his talking behind my back and putting me down every chance he gets”

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Language of Cognition (Counselor’s Response)

“ His behavior annoys you no end”

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Language of Feelings (Counselee’s Statement)

“ This is the second time in a week that she has failed to keep appointment”

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Language of Cognition (Counselor’s Response)

“ You feel dismayed by her neglect of you”

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Stages of a Facilitative Response

S – SpontaneousThe response should be neither rehearsed or mechanical

T – Tailor madeIt should be suited to this person at this time

A – AdequateIt should precisely & correctly identify the other’s feelings

R – ReflectiveIt merely reflects meanings back to the counselee

S – SymbolicIt should offer the counselee whenever possible, concrete & creative picture words to help the counselee see his world more clearly & graphically

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STARS – 3 Step Process

Focus : Focus on the other’s feelings. Keep at the back of your mind “ What must he be feeling to say what he says, the way he says it?”

Fix : Fix the other’s feelings, each at its correct depth, by processing the total message received from him.

Formulate : Formulate a verbal response that is the closest you can come to in matching the verbal & non-verbal content of the counselee’s expression

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Responding Integrate seen & heard, ask : If I were counsellee

how would I feel? Identify feeling intensity & appropriate word Confirm it with your observation of counsellee Find the reason for the feeling Use, you feel …… because (Final Summary) You feel … because…and you

wonder what you could do about it

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Counselling ProcessSecond Stage :

Attitudes : All the above + Confrontation Immediacy

Personalizing

Skills : Personalizing the problem &

the goal together

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Confrontation It is essentially an invitation to another to take a

second look at the consequences of his current behavior in light of his total personal functioning

It is not a demand to change

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Immediacy It is dealing with what is happening in the Here &

Now in the interaction The counsellee’s growth & well being is more

significant in the present rather than the past or future

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Personalizing Problem & Goal Ask Counsellee : What are you doing / not doing that

contributes to your problem Ask yourself the same Use : You feel …. because you cannot …. & you

want to

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Action Oriented Response : SCOPE

1. S : Self-disclosingThe counselor reveals to the counselee significant information about himself

2. C : ConcreteThe counselor initiate a move away from vague generalizations towards concrete & specific self-understanding

3. O : Offering other viewsCounselor invites the counselee to have a second look at himself, his behavior, his situation from a different , broader & more objective perspective

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Action Oriented Response : SCOPE

4. P : Perceptively confrontingSometimes, discrepancies of inconsistencies become apparent in the counselee’s presentation and/or behavior. The counselor should draw his attention to these inconsistencies, inviting him to reflect upon their consequences in his life.

5. E : Encouraging immediacyIt is dealing with what is happening in the Here & Now in the interaction.The counselee’s growth & well being is more significant in the present rather than the past or future.

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Counselling ProcessThird Stage :

Attitudes : All the above

Initiating

Skills : State the goal clearly Identify appropriate steps to

reach the goal Formulate the 1st step

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Initiating Your goal is …. Ask counsellee, what steps could you take to reach the goal?

Write them down. Help counsellee to formulate practical & concrete steps

Read the goal & step back to counsellee for additional steps Yourself add appropriate steps Read again the goal & all the steps back to counsellee & ask to

choose the 1st step Place the 1st step in space & time Use : Your 1st step is ….

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Counselling ProcessSubsequent Stage :

Attitudes : All the above

Evaluating A week or so after the

counsellee has taken the 1st step, evaluate with her performance & modify the plan of action in the light of her feedback

Sustain her motivation using reinforcers


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