This document explores how ethical frameworks inform counselling practice through specific professional requirements, focusing on privacy and confidentiality, client care and wellbeing, professional competence, and comparing frameworks from BACP, NCPS, and UKCP to demonstrate shared professional values.
This document explores the practical application of the BACP Ethical Framework, including confidentiality management, professional boundaries supervision requirements, handling therapeutic endings, and responding to ethical dilemmas in counselling practice.
This document explores the essential personal moral qualities that counsellors and psychotherapists should cultivate, including empathy, integrity resilience, and wisdom, which form the foundation of effective therapeutic relationships and ethical practice.
This document explains the concept of ethical frameworks in counselling focusing on the BACP Ethical Framework for the Counselling Professions including its fundamental values, ethical principles, and personal moral qualities that guide professional practice.
This document examines how cognitive behavioural theory shapes therapeutic practice, exploring session structure, collaborative relationships agenda-setting, and the use of homework tasks to facilitate lasting change.
This document explores comprehensive research on cognitive behavioural therapy including accessing treatment, self-help options, adaptations for specific conditions, and what to do if CBT does not work initially.
This document explores nine key cognitive behavioural therapy techniques including cognitive restructuring, exposure therapy, journaling, and behavioral experiments, explaining how each strategy addresses specific issues and supports therapeutic progress.
This document explains how cognitive behavioural therapy works in practice including session structure, techniques used, advantages and disadvantages and effectiveness in treating various conditions.
This document explores cognitive behavioural theory, founded by Dr Aaron Beck including its focus on thought patterns, the cognitive triad, and approaches to challenging faulty thinking through CBT interventions.
This document outlines person-centred counselling theory, contrasting it with psychodynamic practice, summarising core conditions, and explaining non-directive facilitation grounded in the client’s actualising tendency.
This is an advanced document which provides comprehensive research notes on the psychodynamic approach in psychology, covering core principles, key figures, therapeutic applications, strengths and limitations, and contemporary developments in psychodynamic theory. A level 2 counselling learner can use this document to deepen their understanding of the psychodynamic approach and its relevance to counselling practice.
This document explores psychodynamic theory and its application in counselling, covering the differences between psychoanalysis and psychodynamic counselling, key theoretical elements, and the process of achieving insight through unconscious-to-conscious exploration.
This document explores the emotional and psychological impact of relationship endings on both clients and helpers, examining common responses to termination, consequences of poor endings, and developing practical skills for managing professional relationship conclusions sensitively and effectively.
This document examines methods for evaluating therapeutic progress in helping relationships, exploring systematic assessment approaches, the helper's responsibilities in evaluation, and practical application through case study analysis of successful therapeutic outcomes.
This document examines the foundational concepts for ending therapeutic relationships, exploring the importance of planning, establishing time boundaries, and implementing useful strategies for concluding helping relationships whilst supporting client independence and well-being.
This document explores professional boundaries in helping relationships examining physical and psychological boundaries, their importance for protecting both practitioners and clients, and how to establish and maintain appropriate therapeutic limits.
This document explores the concept of helping relationships across various contexts, examining objectives, expectations, and challenges that arise when supporting others through formal and informal helping interactions.
This document examines democracy as a fundamental value in Britain, exploring how principles of tolerance, respect, and rational discussion apply to counselling practice when working with diverse client opinions and beliefs.
This document explores unconditional positive regard as a core counselling skill, examining how counsellors develop acceptance and non-judgmental attitudes toward clients to facilitate growth and therapeutic change.
This document explores the theories of Carl Rogers and the model developed by Gerard Egan, providing insights into their contributions to counselling skills and practice.