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Person-Centred Work with Children and Young People: UK Practitioner Experiences


Person-Centred Work with Children and Young People: UK Practitioner Experiences

Paperback by Keys, Suzanne; Walshaw, Tracey

Person-Centred Work with Children and Young People: UK Practitioner Experiences

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£17.60

ISBN:
9781906254018
Publication Date:
4 Apr 2008
Publisher:
PCCS Books
Pages:
176 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 10 - 11 May 2024
Person-Centred Work with Children and Young People: UK Practitioner Experiences

Description

This is a book by practitioners for practitioners. Love, respect and time for listening to children and young people are what the person-centred psychotherapists and psychologists contributing to this volume have in common. They do this in a multiplicity of settings including primary and secondary education, a pupil referral unit, voluntary agencies, adoption services, hospital, hospice, community and the streets. All contributors give examples of their work with particular children and young people, aged from two to eighteen. They all share something of how they embody person-centred theory in their work, often engaging with the systems which impact on their work in the therapy room. They are all imbued with person-centred qualities, values and principles including respect, acceptance, empathy, awareness and self-questioning. All describe how much they have learnt from working with children and young people. The inherent political and systemic aspects of this work are highlighted throughout the book, which we hope will encourage and inspire all those interested in what person-centred practice with children and young people might look and feel like. 'Our own view is that modern childhood is in crisis - which itself perhaps reflects a crisis of adulthood more generally, and the milieus (family, educational, environmental) that we are creating for our children. These crises demand urgent consideration if the toxic juggernaut is to be halted and reversed. This welcome new book shows how person-centred practice can inform this consideration, and we wish it wide readership. The issues it raises and the responses it champions will be an essential aspect of the healthier future that we all wish to forge for children the world over' - Foreword, Richard House and Sue Palmer, November 2007.

Contents

Setting the Scene. Richard House and Sue Palmer: The Phenomenon of 'Toxic Childhood' from a Person-Centred Perspective 1.Tracey Walshaw: Creative Discernment: The key to the training and practice of person-centred play therapists 2. Cate Kelly: 'This Is No Ordinary Play': The influence of training on developing the play therapy relationship 3. Tracey Walshaw: Three years as a Person-Centred Counsellor in a Primary School 4. Jo Woodhouse: Sandplay: 'Growing ground' in person-centred play therapy' 5. Gill Clarke: The Risks and Costs of Learning to Trust the Client's Process when Working with Vulnerable Young People 6. Sue Hawkins: Working at Relational Depth with Adolescents in Schools: A person-centred psychologist's perspective 7. Nadine Littledale: Seal'd Respect: An emotional literacy group in a secondary school 8. Suzanne Keys: Widening Participation: A counselling service in a sixth form college 9. Tracey Walshaw: The Buzz: A person-centred pupil referral unit10. Cate Kelly: Adoption and the Person-Centred Approach: Working for the child 11. Julie West: Child- Centred Negotiation: Children participating in collective decision making 12. Ashley Fletcher: Rent Boys 13. Lisa Anthony: Working with Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Young People 14. Seamus Nash: Exploring Issues of Bereavement and Loss with Children and Young People: A person-centred perspective 15. Sheila C Youngson: The Wisdom of Little People: A reflection on forty years of personal and professional learning

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