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RESPONDING SKILLS Presented by: Pooja Atnurkar Rubina Isidore Vibhavari Musale

Responding mgmt counseling

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Page 1: Responding  mgmt counseling

RESPONDING SKILLS

Presented by:

Pooja AtnurkarRubina IsidoreVibhavari Musale

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What is listening ?

Listening is understanding and interpreting what the opposite person says

Difference between Listening and Hearing: Hearing is merely the ability of ear to

sense sounds around one, but, listening is more of conscious effort to interpret the sounds, requiring concentration of mind.

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Response

The reaction or answer to an external stimuli either verbally or non-verbally

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Responding with Empathy

Emotional Intelligence

Understanding Your Partner’s Feelings

Ask Appropriate Questions

Paraphrase the Content

Paraphrase Emotions(Beebe & Ives, 2004, pg119)

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Bad ways of Responding

C:\Users\lenovo\Desktop\bad-counselling-example_Youtube-MQUALITY-wmv[www.savevid.com].3gp

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Types of responses in counseling

Opening or Closing:  Beginning or ending a session.  “Where would you like to start today?”

  Attending: Eye contact, open posture.  Empathizing: Stating what the client is feeling.  “You feel

angry right now.”  Paraphrasing: Stating the essence of what the client is saying.

“You have come to counseling to talk about your math anxiety.”

  Giving Feedback: Stating what has been observed.  “You

frowned when you said that.”

Clarifying: Asking the client to be more concrete. “Tell me more about that.”

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Types of responses in counseling

Directing: Changing the direction of the session or giving a directive.  “Stay with that thought.”

Questioning: Asking a question.  “What could you do to make this better for you?”

  Playing a Hunch: Presenting a possible interpretation. “I have a

sense that this is more important to you than you are saying.”

Noting a discrepancy: Presenting two things that do not seem to fit.  “There seems to be a discrepancy between the sadness you feel and the smile on your face.”

Noting a Connection: Presenting two things that do seem to fit. “There seems to be a connection between the people you are associating with and the conflict you are feeling.”

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Types of responses in counseling

Reframing: Stating an alternative way of viewing. “Another way of looking at this is that you have learned a valuable lesson.”

  Allowing silence: Giving the client time to process and

continue.  Self-Disclosing: Sharing personal information.  “When that

happened to me, I felt betrayed.”

To Acknowledge: Wanting the client to know that the client has been heard. (See Paraphrasing.)

To explore: Wanting the client to expand on what the client has been talking about. (See Questioning.)

  To Challenge: Wanting the client to view his/her situation

differently. (See noting a discrepancy.) 

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Body Language in Responding

38% through your tone of voice and only 7% through

words.

55% is communicated through your

body,

80% of all communication is

non-verbal

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Body Language of the Counsellor

Open Arms Nodding Eye contact Positive Facial Expressions Body Posture

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Responding Skills

Be DescriptiveBe TimelyBe BriefBe UsefulBe Active

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Barriers to Responding Cultural Difference Rapport Non-Verbal Communication Language Lack of Interest Bias Appearance of Client Clients EmotionsRemembering what the client has already said

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Improving your responding skills UnderstandingClarificationSelf-disclosureQuestioningInformation givingReassuranceAnalyticalAdvice Giving

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