Career Counselling

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Career Counselling

PresentedBy:Chris
Afreen

Career Counselling
A process that will help you to know and understand
yourself and the world of work in order to make career,
educational, and life decisions.

what is counselling ?
Counselling can be explained as a process of guiding a
person or a group faced with a problem.

Employee Counselling

Organizations that care for their


employees are perceived as more
meaningful and purposeful.

Importance of
counselling

Counselling is helpful in following situations where physical


medication cannot assure cure.
Stress.
Deterioration of human relations.
Addiction to drugs, alcohol and smoking.
Who need help to overcome difficulties
Those emotionally affected by major disasters, calamities

counselor?
A counsellor should possess the required
competencies.
principles for Counselling:
People can change
They can grow
Accept the person as he is
Once understood ,S/he will attempt to change

Five R of Counselling

Right Purpose
Right Time
Right Place
Right Approach
Right Techniques.

Skills needed for counselling

The following too will be useful in this exercise.


Active listening
Silence
Response
Question
Interpretation.

Need for professionalism in Counselling

Many problems have arisen in the counseling field due to counsellors


weaknesses such as:
Little or no knowledge of subject/methods of counselling
Lack of basic education to understand
Counsellors getting involved with the client in undue manner
Making decisions on behalf of the client
Criticize the behavior of the client
Over talking
Acting like a counselor when you are not
Prying in to personal life of the client

Failure to keep confidentiality

To be successful in counselling:

a)

Counsellor should have adequate data to discuss during


counseling
b) Counselee should be made to feel totally comfortable during
the process of Counseling.
c) Counselling should begin with proper explanation of objective
of counseling.
d) The counselor should have an excellent communication and
behavioral skills (including body language).

Ethics in Counselling
Confidentiality
Mutual trust
Referral in certain cases
Debriefing

CareerCounsellingCompetencies

Introduction

These competency statements are for those professionals interested and trained in the
field of career counselling.
Professional competency statements provide guidance for the minimum
competencies necessary to perform effectively a particular occupation or job within a
particular field. Professional career counsellors (Masters degree or higher) or
persons in career development positions must demonstrate :
Knowledge and skills for a specialty in career counselling that the generalist
counsellor might not possess.
Skills and knowledge are represented by designated competency areas, which have
been developed by
Professional career counsellors and counsellor educators. The Career Counselling
Competency Statements
Can serve as a guide for career counselling training programs or as a checklist for
persons wanting to
Also acquire or to enhance their skills in career counselling.

Minimum Competencies
Individual and Group Counselling Skills, Individual/Group Assessment,
Information/Resources, Program Management and Implementation,
Consultation, Diverse Populations, Supervision, Ethical/Legal Issues,
Research/Evaluation, and Technology.

These areas are briefly defined as follows:


Career Development Theory: Theory base and knowledge considered
essential for professionals engaging in career counselling and
development.
Individual and Group Counselling Skills: Individual and group counselling
competencies considered essential for effective career counselling.
Individual/Group Assessment: Individual/group assessment skills
considered essential for professionals engaging in career counselling.
Information/Resources: Information/resource base and knowledge
essential for professionals engaging in career counselling.

Professional Preparation
The competency statements were developed to serve as
guidelines for persons interested in career development
occupations. They are intended for persons training at the
Masters level or higher with a specialty in career counseling.

Ethical Responsibilities
Career development professionals must only
perform activities for which they "possess or have
access to the necessary skills and resources for
giving the kind of help that is needed" No person
should attempt to use skills(within these
competency statements) for which he/she has not
been trained.

Career Counseling Competencies


and Performance Indicator
Career Development Theory
Theory base and knowledge considered essential for professionals
engaging in career counselling and development. Demonstration of
knowledge of:
1. Counselling theories and associated techniques.
2. Theories and models of career development.
3. Individual differences related to gender, sexual orientation, race,
ethnicity, and physical and mental capacities.
4. Theoretical models for career development and associated
counseling and information-delivery techniques and resources.
5. Human growth and development throughout the life span.
6. Role relationships which facilitate life-work planning.
7. Information, techniques, and models related to career planning and
placement

Individual and Group Counseling Skills


Individual and group counselling competencies
considered essential to effective career counselling
ability to:
1. Establish and maintain productive personal
relationships with individuals.
2. Establish and maintain a productive group climate.
3. Collaborate with clients in identifying personal goals.
4. Identify and select techniques appropriate to client or
group goals and client needs, psychological states,and
developmental tasks.
5. Identify and understand clients personal
characteristics related to career.

Individual/Group Assessment
Individual/group assessment skills considered essential for professionals
engaging in career counseling ability to:
1. Assess personal characteristics such as aptitude, achievement, interests, values,
and personality traits.
2. Assess leisure interests, learning style, life roles, self-concept, career maturity,
vocational identity, career indecision, work environment preference (e.g., work
satisfaction), and other related life style/developmentissues.
3. Assess conditions of the work environment (such as tasks, expectations, norms,
and qualities of the physical and social settings).
4. Evaluate and select valid and reliable instruments appropriate to the clients
gender, sexual orientation,race, ethnicity, and physical and mental capacities.
5. Use computer-delivered assessment measures effectively and appropriately.

Information/Resources

Information/resource base and knowledge essential for professionals


engaging in career counseling knowledge of:
1. Education, training, and employment trends; labor market information and
resources that provide information about job tasks, functions, salaries,
requirements and future outlooks related to broad occupational fields and
individual occupations.
2. Resources and skills that clients utilize in life-work planning and
management.
3. Community/professional resources available to assist clients in career
planning, including job search.
4. Changing roles of women and men and the implications that this has for
education, family, and leisure.
5. Methods of good use of computer-based career information delivery
systems (CIDS) and computerassistedcareer guidance systems (CACGS) to
assist with career planning.

Program Promotion, Management, and


Implementation
Knowledge and skills necessary to develop, plan, implement, and manage
comprehensive career development programs in a variety of settings
knowledge of:
1. Designs that can be used in the organization of career development
programs.
2. Needs assessment and evaluation techniques and practices.
3. Organizational theories, including diagnosis, behavior, planning,
organizational communication, and management useful in implementing
and administering career development programs.
4. Methods of forecasting, budgeting, planning, costing, policy analysis,
resource allocation, and quality control.
5. Leadership theories and approaches for evaluation and feedback,
organizational change, decision-making, and conflict resolution.

Supervision
Knowledge and skills considered essential in critically
evaluating counselor or career development facilitator
performance, maintaining and improving professional skills:
1. Ability to recognize own limitations as a career counselor
and to seek supervision or refer clients when appropriate.
2. Ability to utilize supervision on a regular basis to maintain and
improve counselor skills.
3. Ability to consult with supervisors and colleagues regarding
client and counseling issues and issues related to ones own
professional development as a career counselor.
4. Knowledge of supervision models and theories.

Ethical/Legal Issues
Information base and knowledge essential for the ethical and
legal practice of career counseling knowledge of:
1. Adherence to ethical codes and standards relevant to the
profession of career counseling
2. Current ethical and legal issues which affect the practice of
career counseling with all populations.
3. Current ethical/legal issues with regard to the use of computerassisted career guidance systems.
4. Ethical standards relating to consultation issues.
5. State and federal statutes relating to client confidentiality.

Research/Evaluation
Knowledge and skills considered essential in
understanding and conducting research and evaluation
in career counseling and development ability to:
1. Write a research proposal.
2. Use types of research and research designs appropriate
to career counseling and development research.
3. Convey research findings related to the effectiveness of
career counseling programs.
4. Design, conduct, and use the results of evaluation
programs.

Technology
Knowledge and skills considered essential in using technology to assist
individuals with career planning knowledge of:
1. Various computer-based guidance and information systems as well as
services available on the Internet.
2. Standards by which such systems and services are evaluated (e.g. NCDA
and ACSCI).
3. Ways in which to use computer-based systems and Internet services to
assist individuals with career planning that are consistent with ethical
standards.
4. Characteristics of clients which make them profit more or less from use
of technology-driven systems.
5. Methods to evaluate and select a system to meet local
needs.

THANK YOU

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