CN510.306 Introduction to Counselling
None.
On successful completion of this unit, the student will be able to:
Critically examine several of the major theoretical frameworks associated with family counselling, their assumptions and techniques.
Apply counselling techniques specific to interviewing families.
Interpret and dramatise special issues encountered in counselling families, including the single-parent led family and the remarried family and justify treatment applications.
This unit will introduce learners to the field of family counselling by developing their understanding of the main theoretical frameworks and interventions adopted by family counsellors and systemic practice in particular. Learners will apply the strategies that are particular to these main theoretical frameworks and will critically integrate them into their own professional identity as counsellors. Learners will also examine several issues that are pertinent to families and the field of family counselling. They will critically examine each issue in terms of relevant theory and learn the counselling interventions that are appropriate to counselling families in the context of the issue.
Teaching strategies include: lectures and tutorials, weekend schools; class discussions; role plays and practice of skills within class; presentation of instructional material in the form of printed documentation, DVD, video and audio tape and online interaction.
The Unit Offerings listed above are a guide only and the timetable for any year is the final authority. The College may vary offerings based on demand, regulatory requirements, continual improvement processes or other conditions.
This unit may be available in different modes of delivery i.e. online and face-to-face as listed above. The unit content will not differ between these modes of delivery. There will possibly be a difference in the schedule and/or the prescribed assessment tasks, however both will cover and assess the same content.