Counselling and psychotherapy as a form of learning: some implications for practice created by Theresa Rose,Del Loewenthal and Dennis Greenwood
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 03069885
- LB1027.5 BRI
Item type | Current library | Call number | Vol info | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | |
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Main Library - Special Collections | LB1027.5 BRI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Vol. 33, no. 4 (pages 441-456) | 318 | Not for loan | For in house use |
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This paper explores counselling and psychotherapy as a form of learning. Previous experiences may create distortions in meaning-making perspectives, distortions that create templates for evaluating future experience. These templates act as barriers to being open to experience; thus there is an inability to learn from experience. The process of therapy can provide a learning milieu for the exploration and working through of these barriers, with a potential outcome of a return to learning from experience. It is suggested here that intrinsic to the learning milieu created in therapy there are elements of significant, transformative and emotional learning. Therapy is thus a reparative discourse that facilitates a return to learning from experience. A deconstruction of this concept is provided here as a way of developing the exploration of counselling and psychotherapy as a form of learning.
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