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Advanced Counseling Skills- Part 2
MCFC/MHC/CC Residency 1
Learning Objectives
• From this presentation, you will be given
information to:
Utilize the skill of directions, suggestions, and
information giving
utilize skills of interpretation, reframing, and logical
consequences
Describe and address client resistance and reluctance
May 2011 Revised
Skill: Directives, Suggestions and
Information Giving
• Directives, suggestions and information are
influencing skills that can introduce clients to
new possibilities, highlight alternatives and
inspire new ways of approaching old problems
to help clients make specific changes.
• Directives encourage clients to change the way
they think or act. Appropriateness for use of
directives is based on the counselor’s clinical
judgment, with agreement by client that these
are in the client’s best interest.
May 2011 Revised
Skill: Directives, Suggestions and Information
giving
• When using directives the counselor takes
professional responsibility for assessing what client
change is desirable and empowers and facilitates
to client to make the necessary changes.
• These skills work best when positive rapport is
established and there is a collaborative relationship
between the counselor and client. (SommersFlanagan and Sommers-Flanagan, p.90).
• Example: “We’ve talked about A, B and C, but let’s
now consider X, Y and Z…”
May 2011 Revised
Activity
• Your client recently disclosed that he has been the victim
of domestic violence. He is fearful of what may happen if
he returns home and wants to leave. He has no idea
how to coordinate he move and believes that most
resources are directed toward aiding women. He wants
you “advice” and does not want you to simply refer him
to a social worker because he trusts you and it took him
a long time to even disclose this information at all.
• What do you say? How do you help him?
May 2011 Revised
Skill: Logical Consequences
• Logical Consequences may manifest as the negative
predictable outcomes of behaviors which can and should
be foreseen by the client, but sometimes are not.
• Counselors help clients identify, consider and visualize
both positive and negative outcomes and logical
consequences of their actions take facilitate taking steps
to focusing on avoiding negative consequences and
achieving positive results.
• Example: “ You know that if you don’t make some effort
to change, things are not going to improve…”
May 2011 Revised
Skill: Reframing
• Reframing is an influencing skill to help a client forage a
healthy and positive perspective about a concern in order to
take an effective action. Reframing involves using a different
frame of reference towards a problem.
• Example:
– Cl: “I am worn out. All I ever do is take care of people. I get breakfast
together every morning. I pack lunches before work and school. I
pick out clothes. I get backpacks ready. I work all day long and then
have to come home and do housework and fix supper!”
– Co: “I am impressed with your ability to manage so many things at
one time.”
May 2011 Revised
Skill: Interpretation
• Facilitates clarification between account of the client and
understanding for the counselor.
• Interpretation by counselor is most effective when
supported by evidence from client, other treatment
professionals, reports and/ or supervisors.
• Counselors seeking ongoing supervision of interpretation
increases effectiveness and accuracy.
• Example:
– “Could it be that you are reacting to your children just as your
parents reacted to you when they we upset with your
behavior….?”
May 2011 Revised
Activity
• Your client looks at you, sighs, and holds her
face in her lap. She says to you that she
understands how silly it is to be so sad about a
pet dog dying but she feels devastated because
he was so much more than “just the dog”. He
was her best friend and accepted her, no matter
what. Now she wonders what she will she do.
• How do you interpret this? What might you say?
May 2011 Revised
Skill: Reluctant and Resistant
Clients
Reluctance is passive. It is a client's hesitancy to engage in
the work of counseling due to:
• Fear of intensity (vulnerability)
• Lack of trust
• Shame (to uncover, to expose, to wound)
• Fear of change (change comes with a price)
Resistance is active. Signs of resistance:
• Guarded
• Shut-down
• Push-back by clients who do not want to participate in
counseling (Name some types of clients who are typically
resistant.)
May 2011 Revised
Skill: Managing
Resistance/Reluctance
Unhelpful ways to respond
Poor or negative counselor attitude
Can you think of examples?
Unproductive approaches
Explore your own resistance and reluctance
Accept it as normal…..and
Honor it and work with it
Recognize reluctance as avoidance (not about you
or client)
Examine your skill/intervention
Be flexible
May 2011 Revised
References
Egan, G. (2010). The skilled helper: A problem management
and opportunity development approach to helping (9th ed.).
Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole (Cengage Learning). ISBN: 9780-495-60189-0 or 0-495-60189-6 hard.
Egan, G. (2010). Exercises in helping skills: A manual to
accompany the skilled helper (9th ed.). Belmont, CA:
Brooks/Cole (Cengage Learning). ISBN: 978-0-495-80632-5
or 0-495-80632-3 soft.
Ivey, A. E., Ivey, M. B., & Zalaquett, C. P. (2010). Intentional
interviewing and counseling: Facilitating client development
in a multicultural society (7th ed.). Belmont, CA:
Brooks/Cole, Cengage Learning.
May 2011 Revised