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The counselling approach to careers guidance PDF

205 Pages·2001·1.28 MB·English
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The Counselling Approach to Careers Guidance The counselling approach to careers guidance allows clients to develop a clearer understanding of themselves and the wider issues affecting their career choices. Through detailed case material Lynda Ali and Barbara Graham demonstrate how to use counselling strategies to enable clients to change unhelpful patterns of thought and to move towards achievable goals. The Counselling Approach to Careers Guidance offers a structured model which can be adapted to meet the specific needs of every client. Each of the four stages is illustrated with examples of good practice, showing how to establish the purpose of the interview, the counsellor/client relationship, the key issues for the client and the options available. Using this approach the counsellor is able to help the client move towards a realistic plan of action and to provide the client with the means and the motivation to continue the process independently. The book also explores materials available to careers counsellors and includes a discussion of important issues affecting training and development of advisers in the public sector. This will be a useful handbook for experienced advisers and trainees, in the careers service and a range of professional settings. Lynda Ali is Senior Careers Adviser at Edinburgh University. Barbara Graham is Director of the Careers Service, University of Strathclyde. Susan Lendrum is author of Gift of Tears and Case Material and Role Play in Counselling Training and a counsellor in private practice, Manchester. The counselling approach to careers guidance Lynda Ali and Barbara Graham Edited by Susan Lendrum London and New York First published 1996 by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2001. © 1996 Lynda Ali and Barbara Graham All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book has been requested ISBN 0-415-12172-8 (hbk) ISBN 0-415-12173-6 (pbk) ISBN 0-203-13642-X Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-17624-3 (Glassbook Format) Contents Acknowledgements vi 1 Introduction to counselling in careers guidance 1 2 The counselling approach 10 3 Theoretical background to counselling 26 4 The model for a counselling approach 44 5 Counselling skills 62 6 Application of the model and skills in the careers interview 87 7 The immediate environment 106 8 The impact of the labour market 128 9 Tools available to the careers adviser 146 10 Carol: the context of guidance and the guidance interview 157 11 Training and development for guidance practitioners 178 Notes 187 Useful addresses 189 Select bibliography 190 Index 191 Acknowledgements The authors wish to acknowledge the assistance of the many people who have had a hand in the writing of this book. In particular we are grateful to the guidance practitioners who were our own role models as we were learning about our profession and beginning to practise the counselling approach to guidance. Our editor, Susan Lendrum, and our typist, Helen Crossan, helped the book to grow and develop with their patient contributions to the shaping of the text. We also acknowledge the assistance of the Advice, Guidance, Counselling & Psychotherapy Lead Body in allowing reproduction of a chart showing links between these various fields. Chapter 1 Introduction to counselling in careers guidance In a world in which the concept of ‘a career’ is becoming increasingly fluid, careers guidance is not a once-in-a-lifetime injection of wisdom which orients a person in a particular direction for all time. As life enters new phases and external circumstances add fresh dimensions to a person’s situation, so the need for guidance arises at various times in an individual’s life. Because the need for guidance is associated with uncertainty about future steps, people who seek guidance may regard it as a remedy for a crisis and may expect a ready-made solution from the lips of an expert. Guidance practitioners, on the other hand, recognise guidance as a process to be worked through by the client over time, with support and encouragement from the careers adviser. Since there is potential for the two participants in a careers interview to approach it with such divergent expectations, it is vital that the adviser should make the client aware at an early stage in the discussion of the respective roles of the client and the adviser. It is also important to clarify what can and cannot be achieved during a careers interview. This book therefore begins with a definition of guidance and a look at the people involved in giving and receiving it. WHAT IS GUIDANCE? Effective careers guidance is a process which aims to equip individuals with a clearer understanding of themselves and their potential for future career development. In particular, careers guidance helps individuals to: 2 Introduction to counselling in careers guidance • assess their career development needs at various points in their lives; • understand the process of effective choice of a career; • clarify their objectives for the future; • take appropriate action to implement these objectives. People who are approaching a decision about their future often benefit from speaking to a skilled and informed listener, who can help them to put the many factors affecting their career development into perspective so that they can choose an appropriate direction for the next phase of their lives. WHO GIVES GUIDANCE? Careers guidance is not the exclusive preserve of careers officers in the Careers Service and careers advisers in higher education. A recent study1 has shown that the most influential factor in young people’s choice of degree course is advice from parents. Other informal sources of advice include friends, employers, teachers, librarians, community workers and voluntary agencies such as the Citizen’s Advice Bureaux. Some of the advice from these sources may be sound, well-researched and appropriately targeted, but this is not always the case. Because such ‘advice givers’ are not specialists in careers work and may deal with careers enquiries infrequently, the advice which they give may be, at best, limited and, at worst, out of date, erroneous and misleading. Despite these limitations, informal sources of advice will continue to be used for careers guidance, perhaps because of their very accessibility. The challenge to guidance practitioners is to try to be equally accessible and to demonstrate the benefits of well informed professional careers guidance. Through their contacts with employers, careers advisers are in a unique position, enabling them to interpret, for jobseekers, employers’ recruitment needs and their expectations of applicants. This knowledge anchors their advice in an appreciation of the real world of work which may not be apparent to their clients. Every individual – irrespective of age and ability to pay – should be entitled to up-to-date, accurate, unbiased careers information and guidance delivered by trained, competent, professional guidance practitioners. This ideal has not yet been translated into reality, although it is close to being achieved for learners in schools and universities and the situation is Introduction to counselling in careers guidance 3 improving in further education since charters for further and higher education pointed out students’ right to careers guidance alongside other basic entitlements. For adults outside of education, however, provisions are extremely patchy and access to sound careers guidance may depend upon geographic location, ability to pay or the fortunate coincidence of working for an enlightened employer with a strategy for the career development of staff. It is therefore worth clarifying the sources of help on careers issues to which people in the post-16 age group can turn with the expectation of receiving professional guidance. The following list also represents the target audience for this book. GUIDANCE PRACTITIONERS The term ‘guidance practitioner’ covers the following groups of people: • Careers officers employed in the Careers Service within local authorities, or, following reorganisation of the Careers Service, local enterprise companies or training and enterprise councils. • Careers advisers in higher education institutions. • The growing number of careers advisers in further education institutions. • Careers counsellors in private practice. Although the settings and circumstances in which they work may differ in certain respects from those of the groups mentioned above, other practitioners are also involved in some aspects of careers guidance. These include: • Careers and guidance teachers working with pupils over the age of 16 in schools. • Educational guidance workers who help adults to select courses which will have a direct bearing on their future career planning. • Out-placement counsellors dealing with people whose jobs are redundant. • Personnel managers who specialise in the career and management development of members of their workforce. • Guidance specialists in training agencies who help their clients to choose training courses appropriate to their future career aspirations.

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A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library .. university careers guidance interview, this chapter then outlines the process.
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