CN8100 Basic Counselling Skills; CN8200 Counselling for Common Issues; CN8400 The Person of the Counsellor
Should be taken after or concurrent with CN8500 Person-Centred Therapies: Theory and Practice and CN8600 Person-Centred Counselling Skills
On successful completion of this unit, the student will be able to:
Exemplify high level understanding of own worldview, values and knowledge and how these affect the selection and use of theories and approaches in counselling
Critically evaluate key philosophical assumptions of important counselling theories in light of Christian thought
Select and integrate counselling theories to construct an emerging personal philosophy of practice
Map integrated theories of counselling practice to client assessment and care in an individualised way
Personal Philosophy of Counselling Practice provides students with a birds-eye view of both the historical and contemporary landscape of therapeutic theory and practice, and supports the development of an integrated and personalised approach to counselling. Students will compare, contrast and evaluate key schools of thought in the therapeutic profession, including psychodynamic, cognitive-behavioural, humanistic, systemic, constructionist and neurological. This will be considered in light of Christian theologies of healing, pathology and wellness. Students will also be invited to explore and evaluate their own values, and the “folk healing” practices that have been passed down to them in their own context, in order to effectively integrate these with a chosen theory or theories.
Ideally, the unit works as a follow-up to CN8200 Counselling for Common Issues, by further exploring how different theories of psychotherapy and counselling approach important matters like human development, psychopathology and diagnosis, neurodiversity, working across cultures and assessment more broadly.
By the unit’s end students will be well-equipped to begin the journey of developing a personal philosophy of counselling practice. A theory comparison essay, creative auto-biography project and a counselling theories portfolio all help to scaffold this process.
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.