Essential Interviewing: A Programmed Approach to Effective Communication / Edition 9

Essential Interviewing: A Programmed Approach to Effective Communication / Edition 9

ISBN-10:
1305271505
ISBN-13:
9781305271500
Pub. Date:
01/01/2016
Publisher:
Cengage Learning
ISBN-10:
1305271505
ISBN-13:
9781305271500
Pub. Date:
01/01/2016
Publisher:
Cengage Learning
Essential Interviewing: A Programmed Approach to Effective Communication / Edition 9

Essential Interviewing: A Programmed Approach to Effective Communication / Edition 9

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Overview

Interviewing is one of the most important skills that you'll use in your career. This proven text gives you the tools you need to conduct successful interviews with diverse clients in a variety of professional settings, including social work, counseling, nursing, personnel work, and human services. With an emphasis on the three major stages of interviewing: exploration, clarification, and action, ESSENTIAL INTERVIEWING offers the same programmed-learning model of interviewing that has successfully trained countless members of the helping professions for nearly 30 years. The text makes interview skills clear and specific — and exposes you to a variety of client situations and cultures. Each chapter highlights an ethical situation you may confront in your future career, further grounding you in current standards of professional practice.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781305271500
Publisher: Cengage Learning
Publication date: 01/01/2016
Series: MindTap Course List
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 7.90(w) x 9.90(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

David R. Evans is professor emeritus at the University of Western Ontario, where he was a member of the Clinical Psychology Program for 30 years. He has been a consultant to numerous agencies, including hospitals, adolescent facilities, addictions facilities, and police services. He holds a Ph.D. in applied psychology from the University of Toronto. He has twice been a visiting scholar at Wolfson College, Cambridge. He is a past president of the Canadian Psychological Association and the Ontario Psychological Association. He also has been a member of the Council of Representatives of the American Psychological Association and a representative to the International Union of Psychological Science. He is the author of numerous books, chapters, journal articles, tests and papers.


Margaret T. Hearn has spent over 30 years in the field of psychology. She holds a Ph.D. in counseling psychology from the University of Western Ontario. She has had extensive practical and research experience in clinical health psychology with children and adults at London Health Sciences Centre. Before retirement, her involvement was in the area of hospital management. Dr. Hearn has served as a teacher in the departments of psychology, psychiatry and pediatrics at the University of Western Ontario. She is the author of many books, chapters, articles and papers. In addition she has had extensive involvement with psychology at both a professional and regulatory level.


Max R. Uhlemann is Professor of Counseling in the Department of Educational Psychology and Leadership Studies at the University of Victoria where he is Coordinator of the Counseling Graduate Program. He received his doctorate in Counseling Psychology from Colorado State University in 1974. He has been a counselor educator since 1970. He has been a licensed psychologist since 1976. His research and teaching interests include professional and paraprofessional counseling skill training, micro-counseling skill training, interpersonal process in the counseling dyad, multi-cultural issues in counseling, and ethics and legal education and practice. He has had a private practice in counseling and clinical psychology since 1988. The focus of this practice has been on working with individuals experiencing anxiety, depression, grief, loss, and traumatic stress. He was president of the Canadian University and College Counseling Association from 1984 to 1985. He is currently concluding his nine-year editorship of the CANADIAN JOURNAL OF COUNSELING. In 1996, he received the Professional Contribution Award from the Canadian Counseling Association. He has served on ethics committees for the Canadian University and College Counseling Association, College of Psychologists of British Columbia, and Canadian Counseling Association. He is a member of the Canadian Counseling Association, Canadian Psychological Association, College of Psychologists of British Columbia, Canadian Register of Health Service Providers in Psychology, and the Western Association of Counselor Education and Supervision.


Allen E. Ivey is a distinguished university professor emeritus at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. A diplomat in counseling psychology, he has presented workshops and keynote lectures with Dr. Mary Bradford Ivey throughout the world. Dr. Ivey is a fellow of the American Psychological Association, the American Counseling Association and the Asian-American Psychological Association. His work in diversity led him to be honored as a multicultural elder at the National Multicultural Conference and Summit. He has written more than forty books and two hundred articles and chapters, and his writing has been translated into twenty languages. Dr. Ivey's undergraduate work was in psychology at Stanford University, which was followed by a Fulbright grant to study social work at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark. His doctorate is from Harvard University. At Colorado State University, he led the first research study video in counseling and therapy, and he is the originator of the microskills approach, foundational to this text. He was first to introduce applied neuroscience and neurobiology to the helping fields. He is the recipient of numerous national and international awards.

Table of Contents

1. Programming a Foundation for Learning. Stage I: LISTENING AND EXPLORATION: HELPING CLIENTS IDENTIFY THEIR EXPERIENCES, ISSUES, AND PROBLEMS 2. Attending Behavior. 3. Questioning. 4. Reflecting Content. 5. Reflecting Feeling. 6. Integrating Your Listening and Exploration Skills. Stage II: CLARIFICATION: HELPING CLIENTS TO CLARIFY THEIR EXPERIENCES AND DEVELOP GOALS. 7. Confronting. 8. Communicating Feeling and Immediacy. 9. Self-Disclosure. 10. Interpreting. Stage III: ACTION: HELPING CLIENTS TO TAKE ACTION. 11. Information Giving. 12. Structuring for Exploration, Clarification, and Action. 13. Enlisting Cooperation. Stage IV: EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION: FACILITATING CLARIFICATION, EXPLORATION, AND ACTION. 14. Putting It All Together. Additional Resources. Index.
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