Counselling in Schools
- Robert Bor - Royal Free Hospital, UK
- Jo Ebner-Landy - Teacher and Counsellor, London
- Sheila Gill - London School of Economics and Political Science and General Practice
- Chris Brace - London Guildhall University
`Robert Bor and his colleagues have produced a book which will be of great value both to professional counsellors and to practising school teachers. The wisdom of the authors, based as it is on practical experience, brings a welcome realism, balance and accessibility to the text. Head teachers and all those concerned for the pastoral care of school pupils will find a wealth of advice on issues such as traumatic incidents and disaster recovery plans, bullying, sibling rivalry, anxiety and sexuality. The reader is allowed to eavesdrop on the consultations of school counsellors. There is a particularly useful chapter on setting up and maintaining a school counselling service, which sets out the questions to be faced in advance by the Head and by the counsellor. I commend the book very warmly' - Stephen Baldock, High Master, St Paul's School, Barnes
`Counselling in Schools is an excellent resource for students in training, professionals already working in schools and those thinking of setting up a counselling service' - Heather Jones, Head teacher, Yardleys School, Birmingham
Counselling in Schools is a practical, contemporary guide to providing effective counselling support within school settings. Recognizing the very specific nature of this area of counselling practice and the uniqueness of every school, the authors provide a flexible framework and guidelines for working collaboratively with pupils, families and colleagues.
The authors do not aim to give prescriptive responses to all the problems which pupils may bring to counselling, rather to help counsellors develop their skills in responding to each individual in the most appropriate way. They emphasize the need for counsellors to be resourceful and creative in their approach and stress the reality that change is always an inevitable feature of working in schools.
Written from a systemic and solution-focused perspective and illustrated throughout with vivid case studies, the book examines:
- the need for school-based counselling services
- the range of problems with which pupils present
- legal issues involved in counselling children
- the role and skills of the school counsellor
- specific challenges faced in school settings
The book provides a practical toolkit for counsellors, including advice on setting up a new counselling service, a framework for evaluating the service and accepted guidelines on key issues such as confidentiality and providing access to records.
Counselling in Schools is an invaluable resource for anyone wishing to provide counselling support for pupils in secondary education. Counsellors, teachers, social workers and education welfare professionals will find it a source of practical information and creative ideas.
`Counselling in Schools is an excellent resource for students in training, professionals already working in schools and those thinking of setting up a counselling service' - Heather Jones, Headteacher, Yardleys School, Birmingham
The model described is prescriptive and language based. There is also no reference to play interventions or working with younger children.
The systemic perspective is useful for those working in a school setting but the solution focussed techniques are very cognitive and verbal and this is limiting. The case examples did not really resonate with any children that I have worked with and certainly did not reflect the complexity of the work we do. The techniques rely on an already high functioning verbal and cognitive capacity and many of the younger children we work with have not developed those capacities. However, Students interested in learning more about more solution focussed approach may find it helpful. The section about the history of school counselling was also interesting.
I have used this book for my Module Counselling Skills in Education and recommended as essential reading for any student wishing to pursue a career of counselling within a school setting. The information is relevant and up to date and the chapter on Legal and Confidentiality Issues in Counselling Children is invaluable.
A simple and effective book that walks you gently through all areas of counselling in a school setting. No stone is left unturned, every pitfall is highlighted!