Introduction. 1. Debt counselling: the unfortunate, the incompetent, and the profligate Angela Mann. 2. The inside story: on seeing clients in their own homes John Nicholas. 3. 'I was sick and you visited me': facilitating mourning with hospital patients and their relatives Julia Buchroyd. 4. Who is afraid?: managing anxieties in a youth club Trudy Chapman. 5. The world turned upside down: responses to trauma in the family Elizabeth Nabarro. 6. Culture shock: personal and organizational responses to an ex-patriate lifestyle Sally Holder. 7. Exam failure in the accountancy profession Julia Bridgment. 8. Being and becoming: a study of gifted young musicians Anne Bell. 9. Mirrors on girls and maths Ena Blyth. 10. Poor orphan child: an exploration of sibling rivalry Diana Bass. 11. James: working with a stammerer Barbara Rickinson. 12. The man no one wanted to see Maya Jarrett. Notes on the authors.
Ms Ellen Noonan, Ellen Noonan, Dr Laurence Spurling, Laurence Spurling
`... very useful to trainee counsellors ... range of subjects ...
lucidity of the writing...' - British Journal of Psychotherapy
`... one of those rare books which manage both to inform and
inspire the reader. ... Psychodynamic theory is not particulary
fashionable in social work education at the moment, but
nevertheless I would urge anyone who has doubts about its
usefulness to read this book...' - Issues in Social Work
Education
`This book is generally well produced...the essays are easy to read
with good introductions, discussions and conclusions...it would be
a good buy for the individual who is undertaking more advanced
study with a view to developing his or her practice of couselling.'
- Deborah Banks, Nursing Times.
`...well worth reading and should be added to the nurse tutor's
library...' - Journal of Advanced Nursing
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |