Part I: Foundations of Group Work
Chapter 1: The World of Groups
Chapter 2: Your Behavior in Groups
Chapter 3: Understanding Group Dynamics and Systems
Chapter 4: Stages of Group Development
Chapter 5: Multicultural Dimensions of Group Work
Chapter 6: Theories of Group Intervention
Part II: Skills of the Group Leader
Chapter 7: Assessment and Group Diagnostics
Chapter 8: Specialized Leadership Skills
Chapter 9: When to Intervene in Groups
Chapter 10: Group Techniques and Structures
Part III: Applications and Significant Issues
Chapter 11: Coleadership
Chapter 12: Critical Incidents
Chapter 13: Ethical Issues Unique to Group Work
Part IV: Advanced Group Structures
Chapter 14: Advanced Group Leadership
Chapter 15: Adjunct Structures to Group Work
Chapter 16: Group Leadership Applied to Social Justice and Social
Action
Chapter 17: The End of Our Journey: Where to Go Next?
Jeffrey A. Kottler is one of the most prolific authors in the
fields of counseling, psychotherapy, and education, having
written more than 90 books about a wide range of subjects. He
has authored a dozen texts for counselors and therapists
that are used in universities around the world and a dozen
books each for practicing therapists and educators. Some of
his most highly regarded works include Creative Breakthroughs
in Therapy, The Mummy at the Dining Room Table:
Eminent Therapists Reveal Their Most Unusual Cases and What
They Teach Us About Human Behavior, Bad Therapy, The Client
Who Changed Me, Divine Madness, Change: What Leads to Personal
Transformation, Stories We’ve Heard, Stories We’ve Told:
Life-Changing Narratives in Therapy and Everyday Life, and
Therapy Over 50. He has been an educator for 40 years, having
worked as a teacher, counselor, and therapist in preschool,
middle school, mental health center, crisis
center, nongovernmental organization, university, community
college, private practice, and disaster relief settings. He
has served as a Fulbright scholar and senior lecturer in Peru
and Iceland, as well as worked as a visiting professor in New
Zealand, Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Nepal. He is
professor of counseling at California State University,
Fullerton.
Matt Englar-Carlson, PhD, is an associate professor of counseling
at California State University, Fullerton. He received a master’s
degree in health psychology education from Stanford University, a
master’s degree in counselor education from the Pennsylvania State
University, and a doctoral degree in counseling psychology from the
Pennsylvania State University. He completed his APA accredited
pre-doctoral internship in psychology at the University of Southern
California Student Counseling Center. Matt co-edited In the Room
with Men: A Casebook of Therapeutic Change (2006) and Counseling
Troubled Boys (2008) and is the co-editor of the book series,
Theories of Psychotherapy, published by American Psychological
Association Books. Matt has taught group counseling and process to
hundreds of students across the United States and has facilitated
groups in schools, community settings, work sites, and in
university settings.
"This is the best book out there for introducing students to the
complex world of groups. The text delivers what it promises in the
title. It teaches counseling graduate students how to become solid
group leaders (or—to be more precise—how to begin their journey in
that direction), and it does this in a way that is positive,
knowledgeable, and realistic.…The most impressive aspect of the
material is the authors’ focus on the experiential approach
(training students to be group leaders), combined with an
accessible writing style, a lot of knowledge, and an enthusiastic
attitude."
*Marilyn MacGregor, Western New Mexico University*
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