Summary
Contents
Subject index
Why do I need to learn about CBT and/or the Person-centered Approach? What can these techniques contribute to my counseling training and practice?
This book has some of the answers, showing humanistic, CBT and integrative therapists how to get to grips with each other's approaches. CBT has become more fully present in the therapeutic landscape and therapists from other modalities are increasingly being required to understand or even train in the approach.
Responding to this growing pressure for change, Person-centered therapist Roger Casemore joins forces with Jeremy Tudway. Together they show how counselors can respect and value each other's approaches by more clearly understanding the similarities and differences in theory, philosophy and practice. They clarify how therapists draw upon this knowledge in their practice without betraying the values of their core approach.
This book is recommended for anyone studying Person-centered or CBT modules on counseling & psychotherapy courses, or experienced practitioners wishing to adapt their practice for NHS settings.
A Dialogue on Similarity and Difference
A Dialogue on Similarity and Difference
Originally, we thought we would have an invited chapter from two well-known exponents of the two approaches, to dialogue their responses to the views we are putting forward. As we became more involved in writing the book, however, we recognised that it would be difficult to harmonise such a chapter with the rest of the book. We were also increasingly engaged with our own dialogue and our learning from that, and had started to write separately the first two parts of this chapter. We then decided that we would have a spoken dialogue about whatever we saw as arising from these two submissions. In looking at our work on this chapter, we decided to ...
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