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A human being's development is a complex, multidimensional process,
one open to variations and variances. For professional counselors
to effectively serve those in need or provide preventative programs
fostering the development of wellness, understanding the intricate
nature of human development and the factors that impact that
development is vital. Facilitating Growth Through Lifespan
Development provides readers with a unique and illuminating review
of theories and research that describe and explain the lifespan,
including its normative tasks and progressions, and the challenges
and roadblocks that can be encountered. Readers gain a deeper
understanding of the interplay between one's biological foundations
and the physical-social-psychological environments in which an
individual's development plays out. The book is organized alongside
stages of development, transitioning from conception to death. Each
chapter presents theory and research depicting the unique
neurological and cognitive changes experienced during a particular
stage of development; normative changes in emotional and social
development; and conditions that reflect development "outside of
the norm" and invite mental health intervention and prevention
efforts. Throughout, cases and self-directed exercises foster
greater levels of reader engagement and practical application.
Featuring a novel approach to the subject, Facilitating Growth
Through Lifespan Development is an ideal textbook for courses and
programs in mental health counseling and human development.
Our ability to take time out to simply look inside and begin to
increase our awareness and familiarity with our strengths and
resources is a gift and an essential step to becoming more
self-reliant. In Connecting with the Expert Within: Re-Awakening to
Your Strength and Competence, author and practicing counselor
Richard D. Parsons guides you on a personal journey of
self-exploration and reflection to help you uncover the able and
capable individual at your core. You'll be challenged to reflect
upon times in the past when you've employed your resources,
talents, and personal strengths to thrive-and how you can leverage
those experiences and strengths to face new challenges, tasks, and
goals. You'll learn how to position yourself for positive growth,
build your self-confidence and self-efficacy, and transform your
visions into attainable goals. The book includes a number of
exercises that will help you tap into your inner expert and make
life-changing discoveries. Connecting with the Expert Within is a
self-affirming and inspirational book that teaches you how to apply
key concepts of positive psychology, resilience, and personal
growth to help you achieve your goals and experience a happier,
more fulfilled life.
Introduction to School Counseling: Becoming a Leader, Advocate, and
Change Agent introduces readers to the evolution of the role and
function of the school counselor and their emergence as leaders,
advocates, and collaborators in the provision of quality and
equitable education for all students. The primary goal of the text
is to provide readers with not only information but inspiration in
service of their developing professional identity as a school
counselor. Each chapter opens with a reflection from a school
counselor, which provides readers with valuable insight into the
lived experience of the school counselor. The chapters also employ
case illustrations and guided exercises to foster greater
understanding of the profession. Dedicated chapters explore the
unique dynamic and breadth of the role of the school counselor, how
to advocate for systemic change within school environments, ethical
standards and behavior, and multi-tiered systems of support.
Readers learn how to assist those with educational challenges,
address threats to socioemotional development, connect with parents
and caregivers, and better understand the nuances and requirements
for serving in elementary, middle, and high school environments.
Introduction to School Counseling is an inspiring and informative
resource for foundational courses in school counseling.
As the need for mental health services increases dramatically, the
need for competent, effective counselors has risen in tandem.
Clinical Mental Health Counseling: An Introduction to the
Profession and Practice provides future counselors with a clear,
focused orientation to the field. The text helps readers understand
the evolution of the role of the mental health counselor and the
value served by those within the profession. The book's primary
focus is on fostering the development of the reader's professional
identity as a clinical mental health counselor. Section I of the
text reviews the history and foundation of the profession and
highlights the factors that make mental health counseling unique
among mental health professionals. In Section II, readers are
introduced to the theories and models that guide mental health
counselors' practice in case conceptualization and treatment
formulation. Section III examines the various roles, settings, and
populations served by clinical mental health counselors. The final
section discusses those elements that come together to make
clinical mental health counseling a profession. Clinical Mental
Health Counseling is designed to align with contemporary CACREP
competency standards and features coverage of best practices,
current laws and regulations, and the impact of technology on
practice delivery. The book is ideal for foundational courses in
clinical mental health counseling.
Intervention and Prevention Strategies That Work: Empirically
Supported Approaches to Multitiered School Counseling Services
assists current and future counselors in the selection and
employment of effective intervention and prevention strategies. The
text features a collection of compelling and enlightening studies,
which serve to provide readers with a sound basis for the design
and application of evidence-based solutions. The interventions
highlighted throughout the text are supported by methodologically
and statistically proven research that ranges from randomized,
controlled studies to single-subject case studies and clinical
illustrations. Section I provides an overview of the need and value
of evidence-based practice in a multitiered approach to school
counseling. Sections II and III introduce techniques and strategies
that have proven effective when working with students facing
challenges related to academic success and social development,
including motivational deficits, distractibility, bullying,
prejudice, unhealthy peer relationships, and more. The final
section discusses proven approaches for working with students who
experience anxiety, stress, identity issues, grief, and suicidal
ideation. Highly practical and relevant in nature, Intervention and
Prevention Strategies That Work is an exemplary resource for
practicing and future school counselors.
Are you ready to log on and learn in the online classroom? You may
have comfortable clothes and a snack prepared, but have you created
a plan for how you'll participate, considered how you'll
troubleshoot potential technical issues, and thought through other
challenges and opportunities? A Student's Guide to Surviving &
Thriving in Online Classes provides you with practical,
research-based suggestions to prepare you for success in online
educational experiences. With this guide, you'll reframe your
concept of the "classroom" and reflect on your personal learning
style in relation to online learning. You'll learn how to adapt
critical study habits and learning skills, including
self-regulation, personal motivation, goal setting, and time and
task management, to virtual settings. A timely and vital resource,
this guide will help you develop the mindset and skillsets required
for you to thrive in your online courses. A Student's Guide to
Surviving & Thriving in Online Classes is part of the Cognella
Series on Student Success, a collection of books designed to help
students develop the essential life and learning skills needed to
support a happy, healthy, and productive higher education
experience.
For those in the mental health professions, understanding the
nature and dynamics of groups goes well beyond simple curiosity.
Groups provide a platform, a medium, and a mode for facilitating
growth and development and alleviating and resolving life problems.
Understanding and Facilitating Group Process provides readers with
the foundational skills they need to competently and confidently
engage in and lead group work. The material reflects the knowledge
identified as fundamental to professional practice according to
2016 CACREP standards. The content and exercises within the text
provide readers with an understanding of the theoretical
foundations of group work; the dynamics of group process and
development; therapeutic factors; and the characteristics of
effective group leaders. Readers learn about types of groups and
other considerations that affect conducting groups in various
settings. Finally, the text presents ethical and culturally
relevant strategies for designing and facilitating a group.
Throughout, learning exercises clarify concepts and engage the
reader, and Takeaway for Counselors features provide readers with
reflections to guide professional practice. Illuminating and
essential, Understanding and Facilitating Group Process is an ideal
textbook for courses and programs in mental health counseling.
Recognizing that real-world school counselor practice rarely fits
into traditional models or timetables, Solution-Focused Counseling:
An Evidence-Based Approach for School Counselors provides readers
with evidence-based and effective interventions that work within
the realities of time-limited constraints. The text posits that
school counselor need to employ models of service that are
non-pathologizing in perspective, collaborative, and flexible in
approach and which engage students' strengths and previous
successes in coping. It offers readers greater insight into the
unique perspective and approach that is solution-focused counseling
to help future school counselors translate the theory into
practice. Each chapter includes a description of theoretical
constructs supported by research, case illustrations, analyses of
counselor actions and decision-making processes, and guided
practice exercises to bring the material to life. Individual
chapters address finding hope in the inevitability of change,
scaling, creative adaptations for younger students,
solution-focused small group and classroom application, and more. A
highly practical textbook with emphasis on application in the
school counseling setting, Solution-Focused Counseling is an ideal
resource for graduate-level programs and courses in school
counseling, as well as practitioners within the discipline.
Brief therapy is a unique and effective approach to mental health
service delivery. Brief Psychotherapy: Time-Limited and Effective
Treatments offers readers insight into the assumptions and
operating principles that are at the core of all brief therapies.
The book reviews contemporary and time-limited models of
psychotherapy and also provides clinical illustrations of each
theory. Part I provides readers with an overview of brief therapy.
The chapters describe brief therapy's unique perspective and focus
for mental health service, the social and cultural forces that have
contributed to its emergence, its key values and principles, and
various factors that may impact the suitability of brief therapy
for individual clients. Part II focuses on various theories and
their applications with chapters that cover solution-focused brief
therapy, time-limited dynamic psychotherapy, brief cognitive
behavior therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy, dialectical
behavioral therapy, emotion-focused therapy, interpersonal
psychotherapy, and single-session therapy. Each chapter describes
the individual theory's history and significant contributors;
unique perspective; assumptions and guiding principles; principles
in action; supportive research; and its suitability and
effectiveness. Throughout, engaging case studies and activities
bridge theory and practice and enrich the student learning
experience. Designed to provide students and practitioners with an
effective introduction to emerging mental health treatment and
provisions, Brief Psychotherapy is an ideal resource for mental
health training programs and practitioners at all levels.
The Counselor as Practitioner-Researcher: A Practical Guide to
Research Methods is designed to help readers integrate a
researcher's perspective and research methodology into their
professional practice. Approaching practice as a
practitioner-researcher not only facilitates the gathering of data
and the drawing of useful conclusions, but also results in more
ethical and effective practice decisions. Section I provides
readers with an overview of the need and value of research in
support of the counseling profession and as a basis for sound and
successful practice decisions. In Section II, the fundamentals of
quantitative, qualitative, and mixed designs are reviewed. Section
III highlights specific designs and their value to the counselor as
practitioner-researcher, including between group, within subject,
action research, and case study designs. The text concludes with an
extensive case illustration of counselor research and the steps
necessary to developing a specific research plan. The Counselor as
Practitioner-Researcher assists those in training and those in
practice to not only become informed consumers of research, but
also "doers" of research as it guides their practice decisions,
affords measures of accountability, and supports program
evaluation.
Preparing for Your Licensing Exam: NCE and NCMHCE well prepares
future counselors to sit for their National Counselors Examination
and National Clinical Mental Health Counseling Examination. The
book not only helps readers cultivate physical and mental states
optimal for testing, it also reviews core concepts and competencies
that are likely to appear on the exams. The opening chapter
provides readers with a set of strategies and techniques to help
them review all they have learned and also facilitate the ability
to retrieve that information during testing. The following chapters
address key topics within the profession, including professional
orientation and ethics, lifespan development, social and cultural
diversity, career development theory and practice, theories and
techniques, group work and group counseling, assessment, research
and program evaluation, and professional development, identity, and
supervision. Each chapter features an introduction that identifies
competencies assigned by CACREP, NBCC, and NCMHCE and related to
the specific content area; descriptions of key theories, concepts,
and constructs; sample test questions for self-assessment; and
additional resources for further review. All chapters and testing
materials included in this text have been prepared by university
faculty who specialize in the topics covered in their chapter.
Preparing for Your Licensing Exam is an essential resource for any
future counselor preparing to take the NCE or NCMHCE.
A blueprint for doing clinical work in field experience, this
practical book aids students in developing their professional
identity on their journey toward becoming a counselor. Authors
Naijian Zhang and Richard D. Parsons help students integrate the
knowledge they learn across the curriculum by presenting a roadmap
of how to start, navigate, and finish a practicum or internship.
Throughout the book, coverage of CACREP standards, case
illustrations, exercises, and real-life examples create an
accessible overview of the entire transitioning process. Field
Experience is part of the SAGE Counseling and Professional Identity
Series, which targets specific competencies identified by CACREP
(Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Programs).
Counseling Theory: Guiding Reflective Practice continues the goals
set out in the series of texts on developing professional identity
in counseling for the theories course. Each chapter provides
students with a snapshot of a particular theory/approach, the major
thinkers associated with each theory, application to a single case
study, and critical thinking and application questions to help them
internalize the content presented and apply it to their own
development as a counselor. Beginning with chapters on
understanding the nature of theory, multicultural considerations,
and a presentation of the case it them noves on to all the major
theoretical approaches such as Frued and psychoanalysis, Adler,
Rogers, Existentialism, Gestalt, cognitive behavioral, Reality,
Family, Feminist and postmodern approaches. Finally the last part
discuss integration of theory and a global perspective. Rich with
pedagogical and ancillary features, including: verbatim
client/therapist dialogue to help students understand application,
guided practice exercises to help student internatize and grow
their sense of counselor identity, video vignettes for each
chapter/major theory posted to the student study website.
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