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Copyright: 2012 Australian Institute of Professional Counsellors

Institute Inbrief - 03/11/2017

WELCOME  

Welcome to Edition 280 of Institute Inbrief! In this edition’s featured article we explore some fundamental concepts behind the narrative approach to counselling.

 

Also in this edition:

  • A Case Using Art Therapy Techniques
  • The Making of a Flourishing Family
  • The Importance of Teamwork
  • Social Media Updates & Much More!

Enjoy your reading!

 

Editor.

 

 

Join our community:

 

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INTOnews  

 

Bachelor & Master of Counselling

 

Semester 3 Intake Closing

 

At 5pm Monday (6 November) we’re closing our Semester 3 intake into our Bachelor of Counselling and Master of Counselling.

 

Both programs are government Fee-Help approved, so you can Learn Now and Pay Later.

 

You can learn more about each program and submit an expression of interest here:

 

Bachelor of Counselling: www.aipc.net.au/degree

 

Master of Counselling: www.aipc.net.au/master-of-counselling.php

 

There are only a handful of places remaining in each program. If you’re interested in getting a head start over the Summer Semester, please submit your expression of interest now.

INTOstudies  

 

Diploma of Counselling

 

It’s time to start loving what you do!

 

We’ve been training qualified Counsellors for over 25 years. Overwhelmingly, the number one reason people cite as why they became a Counsellor – to start loving what they do. They were stuck in a rut doing something they had no passion for, and it was dragging them down.

 

If you want a deeper understanding of yourself, and to use that knowledge to assist others overcome their challenges and start enjoying life again – then counselling is likely for you.

 

Too often we get drawn into a career that offers little personal satisfaction. Counsellors are passionate about the important work they do. They’re often someone that friends and family naturally come to for assistance. And they get immense personal reward helping others.

 

If that sounds like you, then it’s time to start pursuing your passion:

  • Learn about yourself and help others lead better lives
  • Be employed in one of the fastest industry growth sectors in the nation
  • Self-paced training, so you can fit learning around your life
  • Flexible and supported training with quality learning materials

You can learn more here: www.aipc.net.au/course_dippro.php

 

 

AIPC’s Community Services Courses

 

Helping You Help Your Community!

 

We’ve helped people from all sorts of backgrounds become counsellors, and now we can assist you in fulfilling your goal of working within the Community Services sector! From 2017, AIPC is delivering the following two new courses:

 

Diploma of Community Services (Case Management) – learn more

 

Diploma of Youth Work – learn more

 

There has never been a better time for you to become involved and invested in the Community Services industries. It is predicted, between the years of 2015 to 2019, that employment within the Health Care and Social Assistance industries will increase by 18.7% (www.lmip.gov.au, 2015).

 

By gaining a qualification in Community Services (Case Management) or Youth Work, you will be contributing to an industry that serves a very important purpose: to assist those with personal or relationship challenges. There is nothing more fulfilling than helping others overcome seemingly impossible obstacles. And there’s no better time to do that than now!

 

To learn more about these programs, visit https://www.aipc.net.au/enrolment.php

 

AIPC courses:

 

Diploma of Counselling

 

Diploma of Community Services (Case Management)

 

Diploma of Youth Work

 

Bachelor of Counselling

 

Graduate Diploma of Counselling

 

Master of Counselling

INTOcounselling  

 

Narrative Therapy: Key Concepts

 

Narrative therapy, emerging since the 1980s, has been defined as “a postmodern-feminist-constructivist approach that entails the co-construction of real, imagined, or possible stories of the past, present, or future” (Mascher, 2002, p. 58). The shift from problematic stories to more adaptive ones leads to greater empowerment and enables clients to more successfully manage their lives (Seligman, 2006). In this article we explore some of narrative therapy’s key concepts.

 

Given the importance of language to narrative therapy, it is not surprising that certain words and phrases come to have technical meanings within this theoretical field. First, let us state what you will not see in a genuine narrative approach. Because the client is deemed to be the expert on his own life and the therapeutic alliance is formed as a partnership in which the therapist is a consultant, typical counselling concepts such as “resistance”, “denial”, or “mental disorders” are not to be found in the sessions. Too, those using a narrative approach have little use for the DSM: the Diagnostic and Statistics Manual of symptoms describing the various personality and mental disorders. Those would describe, after all, someone else’s story about the client, not that of the client.

 

Below we delineate several notions that are essential to a narrative approach. Many of the key concepts are also techniques, but in this article we look only at the concepts that do not also constitute a technique. You may notice that many of them seem stolen from the literature teacher’s arsenal of ways to analyse a novel. Four of them belong to a new wave of narrative approach called “personal construct therapy”.

 

Personal construct therapy

 

Robert Neimeyer (2009) and other constructivist psychotherapists (Raskin & Bridges, 2008) have looked at personal problems in the way that a person might analyse a story. Called personal construct therapy, it is an adjunct to White/Epston’s narrative therapy, which we describe more fully in the next chapter through its techniques. Some of the concepts Neimeyer and others use for analysis include:

 

Setting. Where does the story take place? When? Does it occur indoors, outdoors, or over a wide area? The setting provides the backdrop for the characters to act out the plot, and it can be “painted in” with either broad brushstrokes or in painstaking detail.

 

Characterisation. The people (actors) in the story are the characters. Typically, the client is the protagonist, or viewpoint character, who is central to the plot. Often there is an antagonist, who opposes or is in conflict with the protagonist. The client may perform the role of narrator, adding insight about the personality and motives of the characters, or this may emerge in the telling of the story. Sometimes, clients act out the story.

 

Plot. What is happening to the characters? Are there several episodes or actions in the plot? Are these coherently linked by the client (if not, the therapist can help the client to understand how they may all be related). The plot may have difficult problems and be highly “problem-saturated”, where it’s hard to see any solutions, but with telling and re-telling the story, solutions may develop.

 

Themes. What is the reason that things are happening in the story? What meaning(s) does the client attach to the story? What is the client’s emotional experience as he tells the story? What does the client see as significant in the story? It is the client’s understanding and focus that is important here, not that of the therapist. But the client may offer understanding on only a single level: say, cognitive, emotional, or spiritual. The therapist may thus be able to employ different techniques to help the client understand the story and the themes in it from different levels (Sharf, 2012).

 

Other concepts

 

Still organised around a novel, other narrative therapists have described concepts essential to how narrative therapy is actually practiced.

 

Discourse. If we think for a moment where the “buzz” of talk is in our society at any given time, we begin to understand the concept of discourse. We experience the creating and developing of discourse when we observe or participate in discussions through a variety of media, including children’s stories, books, songs, television programs, and movies. Of course, members of societies hold a wide range of perspectives regarding various topics, such as on education, religion, and questions related to civic life, but often communities come together around particular views on the matters under discussion. When this happens, we see a dominant discourse constellate. An example of a dominant discourse for the first half of the 20th century was that women need to be protected and should basically make their me[n happy, keeping the home fires burning. A dominant discourse now, at least in most western developed nations, is that fitness is important, and people do a disservice to all in their lives – family members, employers, and themselves – when they do not eat in a healthy way and exercise regularly.

 

We should note that, while a dominant discourse may hold sway in a society, alternative discourses and stories are always present. No matter how strong the dominant discourse is on a given topic, some people will always hold a different view.

 

Dominant plots and counterplots. A client can and often does come with a highly specific narrative about her life in which she takes a particular perspective and through which she predicts how events will turn out in the future. Again, if clients are showing up in the therapy room, the chances are good that such a dominant plot is full of problems and offers only limited possibilities for future success. Like societal-level dominant discourses, however, there is always room for an alternative view, and counterplots can be constructed collaboratively between therapist and client which are based on different details of the client’s life and a more positive view of future possibilities for coping.

 

Deconstruction. Upon an individual forming a dominant plot or a society coalescing around a dominant discourse, the thing takes on a life of its own, and comes to be taken for granted by those who subscribe to it (or we could say: those who are in its thrall). From that point, the plot or discourse tends not to be questioned. How many ambitious, intelligent, career-minded women through the early years of the last century never questioned the injustice of being denied the right to hold a job outside the family? The concept of deconstruction comes into play when therapists help clients to systematically review – in detail – the assumptions comprising an event, circumstance, belief, or behaviour. The plots and discourses deconstructed are those which have caused difficulty or limitation to clients. The alternative plots which clients are encouraged to develop allow for creative solutions to the problems presented (Archer & McCarthy, 2007).

 

This article was adapted from Mental Health Academy’s upcoming professional development course, “Narrative Therapy: The Basics”.

 

References:

 

Archer, J., & McCarthy, C.J. (2007). Theories of counselling & psychotherapy:  Contemporary applications. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Education, Inc.

 

Mascher, J. (2002) Narrative therapy: Inviting the use of sport as metaphor. Women and Therapy, 25, 57-74.

 

Raskin, J.D., & Bridges, S.K. (Eds.). (2008). Studies in meaning 3: Constructivist psychotherapy in the real world. New York: Pace University Press.

 

Seligman, L. (2006). Theories of counseling and psychotherapy: Systems, strategies, and skills, 2nd ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ:  Pearson Education, Inc. ISBN 0 – 13 – 114975 – X.

 

Sharf, R. (2012). Theories of psychotherapy and counselling: Concepts and cases, 5th ed. Belmont, CA:  U.S.A.: Brooks/Cole, Cengage Learning. ISBN 10 0 – 8400 – 3366 – 4; ISBN 13 – 978 – 0 – 8400 – 3366 – 6.

 

Course information:

 

Diploma of Counselling

 

Diploma of Community Services (Case Management)

 

Diploma of Youth Work

 

Bachelor of Counselling

 

Graduate Diploma of Counselling

 

Master of Counselling

 

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INTOarticles  

 

A Case Using Art Therapy Techniques

 

Jodie is a 40 year old woman who is married with three children and works full-time in a professional career. She has been experiencing low levels of energy for approximately 18 months along with feelings of stress and overwhelm. While working with Jodie, the Professional Therapist adopts the use of art therapy techniques to allow the client to look outside the box and find novel ways to increase self-awareness, reduce stress, and improve her physical, mental, and emotional well-being.

 

Click here to continue reading this article.

 

 

The Making of a Flourishing Family

 

Families that flourish generally have an atmosphere characterised by warmth and a sense of congeniality. There is a caring attitude conveyed both between the members and to those in the “outside” world. People in such a family feel connected to one another, and seek to enhance the wellbeing of one another. An understanding about the importance of interdependence prevails, as well as a sense of optimism about the capacity of the family to support and protect its members.

 

Click here to continue reading this article.

 

More articles: www.aipc.net.au/articles

INTOdevelopment  

 

Learn from Global Mental Health Experts

 

Mental Health Academy puts quality learning by global experts at your fingertips, 24/7. Accessing cutting-edge evidence and practice-based knowledge has never been more convenient than MHA.

 

Topics explored by MHA courses include: Evidence-based therapies, mindfulness, CBT, focussed psychological strategies, children & adolescents, relationship counselling, motivational interviewing, depression & anxiety, addictions, trauma, e-therapy, supervision, ethics, plus much more.

 

Join MHA now to enjoy: 

  • Access to on-demand, video-based learning (100+ hours)
  • Access to self-paced, text-based learning (120+ courses)
  • Invitations to select events and Masterclasses
  • Online, 24/7 access to courses - from anywhere
  • Personalised online classroom to facilitate learning
  • Professional certificates of attainment
  • New programs released every month
  • Plus much more!

Learn more here: https://www.mentalhealthacademy.com.au/about-us

INTOconnection  

 

Have you visited Counselling Connection yet? There are hundreds of interesting posts including case studies, profiles, success stories, videos and much more. Make sure you too get connected (and thank you for those who have already submitted comments and suggestions).

 

The Importance of Teamwork

 

Many people working in organisations try to avoid being part of a team. Perhaps the many levels of requirements for good teamwork place it in the “too-hard” basket. Yet there are many advantages accruing to both the organisation and the individual from successful teamwork.

 

Click here to read the full post and leave a comment.

 

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URL: www.counsellingconnection.com 

INTOtwitter  

 

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INTOquotes  

 

"The teacher who is indeed wise does not bid you to enter the house of his wisdom but rather leads you to the threshold of your mind."

 

~ Khalil Gibran

INTOseminars  

 

Many students of the Diploma of Counselling attend seminars to complete the practical requirements of their course. Seminars provide an ideal opportunity to network with other students and liaise with qualified counselling professionals in conjunction with completing compulsory coursework.

 

Seminar topics include:

  • The Counselling Process
  • Communication Skills I
  • Communication Skills II
  • Counselling Therapies I
  • Counselling Therapies II
  • Legal & Ethical Frameworks
  • Brief Interventions and Loss & Grief Support
  • Individualised Support and Working with Mental Health
  • Advanced Counselling Techniques

Click here to access all seminar timetables online.

 

To register for a seminar, please contact your Student Support Centre.

 

Course information:

 

Diploma of Counselling

 

Diploma of Community Services (Case Management)

 

Diploma of Youth Work

 

Bachelor of Counselling

 

Graduate Diploma of Counselling

 

Master of Counselling

 

Join our community:

 

Facebook: www.aipc.net.au/facebook

 

Twitter: www.aipc.net.au/twitter

 

YouTube: www.aipc.net.au/youtube


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