Librarian View
LEADER 07590nam a22005173i 4500
001
991005349589707546
005
20180309073621.0
006
m o d |
007
cr cnu||||||||
008
180309s2013 xx o ||||0 eng d
020
a| 9780199989782
q| (electronic bk.)
020
z| 9780199972180
035
a| (HKSYU)b18478888-852hksyu_inst
035
a| (Au-PeEL)EBL1183117
035
a| (CaPaEBR)ebr10687983
035
a| (MiAaPQ)EBC1183117
035
a| (OCoLC)841171940
040
a| MiAaPQ
b| eng
e| rda
e| pn
c| MiAaPQ
d| MiAaPQ
050
4
a| BF636.6 .K565 2013
082
0
a| 158.3
100
1
a| Kirschenbaum, Howard.
245
1
0
a| Values Clarification in Counseling and Psychotherapy :
b| Practical Strategies for Individual and Group Settings.
264
1
a| Cary :
b| Oxford University Press, USA,
c| 2013.
264
4
c| ©2013.
300
a| 1 online resource (226 pages)
336
a| text
b| txt
2| rdacontent
337
a| computer
b| c
2| rdamedia
338
a| online resource
b| cr
2| rdacarrier
505
0
a| Cover Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Values Clarification in Counseling and Psychotherapy -- 1 Paul's Case: A Brief Example of Values Clarification Counseling -- 2 The Values Clarification Approach -- What Values Clarification Is -- What Values Clarification Is Not -- A Brief History of Values Clarification -- Further Developments in Values Clarification -- 3 Implementing Values Clarification -- The Overall Values Clarification Process -- Counselor and Therapist Self-Disclosure -- Individual and Group Formats -- 4 The Value-Clarifying Question -- How Clarifying Questions Work -- Thought-Provoking Questions -- Clarifying Questions -- Good Clarifying Questions -- Where Do Clarifying Questions Come From? -- Examples of Clarifying Questions -- 5 The Clarifying Interview -- Steps in the Clarifying Interview -- Analyzing a Clarifying Interview-Paul's Case Revisited -- 6 Values Clarification Strategies -- Introduction -- 1. Inventories -- 2. Rank Order (Prioritizing) -- 3. Forced-Choice Ladder -- 4. Continuum -- 5. Either-or Forced Choice -- 6. Strongly Agree/Strongly Disagree -- 7. Values Voting -- 8. Proud Questions -- 9. Magic Questions -- 10. Percentage Questions -- 11. Pie of Life -- 12. Public Interview -- 13. Group Interview -- 14. Unfinished Sentences -- 15. I Learned Statements -- 16. I Wonder Statements -- 17. Alternatives Search -- 18. Consequences Search -- 19. Patterns Search -- 20. Alternative Action Search -- 21. Force Field Analysis -- 22. Removing Barriers to Action -- 23. Getting Started or Next Steps -- 24. Self-Contract -- 25. What We Know and What We Want to Know -- 26. Values Name Tags -- 27. What's in Your Wallet? -- 28. One-Minute Autobiography -- 29. Pages for an Autobiography -- 30. Role Model Analysis -- 31. Board of Directors -- 32. Chairs (or Dialogue with Self).
505
8
a| Strategies 33 to 38: Life Goals Strategies -- 33. Life Line -- 34. Who Are You? -- 35. Epitaph -- 36. Self-Obituary -- 37. Self-Eulogy -- 38. Life Inventory -- Strategies 39 to 41: Written Self-Reflection Strategies -- 39. Values Cards -- 40. Values Diary -- 41. Values Journal -- 7 Tara's Case: The Woman Who Was Trapped in Her Job -- Comment on the Clarifying Interview -- 8 Handling Strategic, Value, and Moral Conflicts with Clients -- Strategic, Value, and Moral Conflicts -- A Continuum of Counseling Responses -- To Clarify or Not to Clarify -- 9 Some Applications of Values Clarification Counseling -- Career Counseling and Development -- Rehabilitation Counseling -- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder -- Human Sexuality -- Counselor and Clinical Education and Supervision -- Personal Growth -- School Counseling -- 10 Values Clarification and Other Approaches to Counseling and Psychotherapy -- Person-Centered Counseling and Psychotherapy -- Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies -- Reality Therapy/Choice Theory -- Existential Therapy -- Adlerian Therapy-Individual Psychology -- Solution-Focused Brief Therapy -- Narrative Therapy -- Motivational Interviewing -- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy -- Appreciative Inquiry -- Life Coaching -- Positive Psychology -- 11 Theory and Research -- What Is a "Value"? -- Values Clarification Is and Is Not Value Free -- Multicultural Aspects of Values Clarification -- Research on Values Clarification -- Conclusion -- References -- Index -- Footnotes.
520
a| This work meets a long-standing need in the helping professions by being the first and only comprehensive book on how counselors and psychotherapists can work with clients around values, goal-setting, decision-making and action planning. Helping clients determine their priorities, set goals, make decisions, and take action to improve their lives are common tasks for virtually all helping professionals when engaging with clients. This is the process known as "values clarification" (or "Values Clarification"). While counselors and psychotherapists widely practice values clarification-some knowingly, others unaware-they typically do so with a limited understanding of its theory, methods and various applications. This book demonstrates, with great precision, case studies, and hundreds of clinical examples, how counselors and psychotherapists in many fields can ask good clarifying questions, conduct clarifying interviews, and employ dozens of values clarification strategies with individuals, couples, families, and groups. To illustrate how values clarification can be used to explore a myriad of counseling topics, the examples throughout the text are often grouped around more specific applications for marriage and family counseling, career counseling, substance abuse and recovery counseling, geriatric counseling, grief counseling, pastoral counseling, financial counseling, school counseling, rehabilitation counseling, counselor/clinical education and supervision, health counseling, and personal growth. There are clear descriptions of what values clarification is and is not, theory and research, multicultural and diversity issues, and how counselors and therapists can handle value and moral conflicts with clients. Values clarification is compared and contrasted to other approaches to counseling and psychotherapy, including person-centered,
520
8
a| cognitive-behavioral, reality therapy-choice theory, existential, individual psychology, solution-focused, narrative, motivational interviewing, acceptance and commitment therapy, appreciative inquiry, life coaching, and positive psychology.
588
a| Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
590
a| Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2018. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
650
0
a| Counseling psychology.
650
0
a| Group psychotherapy.
650
0
a| Psychotherapy.
650
0
a| Values clarification.
655
4
a| Electronic books.
776
0
8
i| Print version:
a| Kirschenbaum, Howard
t| Values Clarification in Counseling and Psychotherapy : Practical Strategies for Individual and Group Settings
d| Cary : Oxford University Press, USA,c2013
z| 9780199972180
856
4
0
u| https://hksyu.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/syu/detail.action?docID=1183117
z| Full-text via ProQuest Ebook Central
907
a| b18478888
b| 06-02-22
c| 13-03-18
935
a| (MiAaPQ)EBC1183117
9| ExL
998
a| o
b| 13-03-18
c| m
d| z
e| -
f| eng
g| xx
h| 0
i| 1
910
a| CSIDS-EBRARY
945
h| Supplement
l| location
i| barcode
y| id
f| bookplate
a| callnoa
b| callnob
n| CP502