Abstract
An examination of guidance and counselling must begin by insisting that just as every teacher is a teacher of social skills (Chapter 11), so every teacher is an educational counsellor. By this I mean that part of each teacher’s function is to help children deal with personal problems and to make decisions about the course that their lives should take. Since teachers are individuals they will inevitably vary in the degree of importance they attach to their counselling roles, and they will also vary in the extent to which children seem prepared to consult them about their difficulties. Some teachers tend to invite confidences more readily than others, and to be more sympathetic and patient in their relationships with children. Children feel they can talk to them, and can trust their reactions. It is in fact these two qualities, sympathy and trustworthiness, rather than any great familiarity with counselling techniques, that children appear to look for when deciding to whom they should turn when in need.
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Additional reading
Ball, B. (1984) Careers Counselling in Practice. London: Falmer Press. One of the best short introductions.
Campion, J. (1992) Working with Vulnerable young Children. London: Cassell. Good on practical ways for helping children with behaviour and personality problems to cope.
Cooper, P. (1993) Effective &hools for Disaffected Pupils. London: Routledge. Very good on whole-school approachesto pupils with problems and on ways of making schools more relevant to their needs.
Egan, G. (1986) The SkiiJ.ed Helper, 3rd edn. Monterey, Ca: Brooks/Cole. Something of a classic in the field.
Kennedy, E. and Charles, S.C. (1990) On Becoming a Counsellor: A basic guide for non-professional counsellors, 2nd edn. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan. A highly readable and iriformative text for non-specialists. Covers the whole field.
MacLennan, B.W. and Dies, K.R. (1993) Group Counselling and Psychotherapy with Adolescents, 2nd edn. Columbia: Columbia University Press. Full of practical ideas for effective work with troubled adolescents.
Marsland, D. (1987) (Ed.) Education and Youth. London: Falmer Press. Very good on all aspects of adolescent problems within education, including peer groups, vocational issues, and counselling.
Murgatroyd, S. (Ed.) (1980) Helping the Troubled Child: Inter-professional case studies. London: Harper & Row. Deals comprehensively with methods of treatment.
Murgatroyd, S. (1985) Counselling and Helping. London: Methuen/The British Psychological Society. Practical and readable introduction to the counsellor’s tasks.
Nelson-Jones, R. (1982) The Theory and Practice of Counselling Psychology. London: Holt, Rinehart & Winston. A major text reviewing the whole area of psychological counselling. Excellent.
Nelson-Jones, R. (1993) Practical Counselling and Helping Skills, 3rd edn. London: Cassell. Perhaps the best short text available.
Rogers, C. (1951) Client Centred Therapy. London: Constable. One of the most valuable and influential books on counselling to appear since the war; the book could be said to have ushered in a new era in counselling with the emphasis upon the part played by clients themselves in solving their own problems. The reader interested in counselling will enjoy the book, not only for the practical guidance it provides but for the humanity and sympathy that characterize it throughout. Continuously in print.
Rutter, M. (1975) Helping Troubled Children. Harmondsworth: Penguin. A practical text on causes and treatment. Now something of a classic.
Williamson, N. (1987) Tripartism revisited: Young people, education and work in the 1980s. In D. Marsland (Ed.) Education and Youth. London and Philadelphia: Falmer Press. A first-class look at vocational issues with an excellent bibliography. The rest of the book also makes relevant reading.
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© 1995 David Fontana
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Fontana, D. (1995). Educational guidance and counselling. In: Psychology for Teachers. Psychology for Professional Groups. Palgrave, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-24139-2_12
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-24139-2_12
Publisher Name: Palgrave, London
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