Doing Better: Improving Clinical Skills and Professional Competence by Jeffrey Kottler
Doing Better is intended to help therapists and counselors to explore more fully and systematically the processes of self-improvement in their work and lives.
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Doing Better is intended to help therapists and counselors to explore more fully and systematically the processes of self-improvement in their work and lives.
Due to the nature of their work, most practitioners need assistance in honing their clinical skills and staying healthy. Doing Better gives practitioners just such a resource. In this volume, Kottler, Jones, and their associates provide readers with scholarly based but pragmatic ways of helping themselves and growing through their work. Thanks to this book, we now have a blueprint for developing as professionals in the best possible way. -- Samuel T. Gladding, Ph.D., Chair, Department of Counseling, Wake Forest University
The authors have a warm, insightful, and stimulating writing style that encourages readers to think through critical professional issues and examine their own development and practice. This book is of value to experienced counselors and therapists looking for a way to reflect on what they do and where they are going in their careers. -- James M. Benshoff, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Counseling and Educational Development, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Preface
Authors
When Therapists Supervise Themselves
Jeffrey A. Kottler
The Natural and Unnatural Evolution of Therapist Development
Jeffrey A. Kottler and W. Paul Jones
Critical Self-Monitoring
David Shepard and Gloria Morrow
A Syllabus for Self-Supervision
W. Paul Jones and Robert L. Harbach
Confronting Adversity
Dana L. Comstock and Thelma H. Duffy
Hasta La Vista Baby-I'm Outta Here:Dealing With Boredom
Sherill Wiseman and Carol Scott
Recognizing Ethnic/Racial Biases and Discriminatory Practices Through Self-Supervision
Jesse Brinson and Jose M. Cervantes
Self Supervision in Youth Counseling
David Leary
Technoconsultation:Getting Help in Far-Flung Places
John A. Casey and W. Paul Jones
There is no I in Self:A Discursive Approach to Self-Supervision
Stacey L. Sinclair and Gerald Monk
From Self-Regulation to Self-Supervision:Lessons from Sport Psychology to the Practice of Therapy
David D. Chen and Matt Englar Carlson
Self-Supervision in Medical Settings
Laurie Carty and W. Paul Jones
Licensing Boards and Continuing Professional Growth:Friend or Foe?
Shirley Emerson and W. Paul Jones
Therapist:Heal Thyself!
Maryam Sayyedi and Kathy O' Byrne
Blind Spots and Ruts in the Road:The Limits of Self-Supervision
Leah Brew and Mike Altekruse
Final Thoughts
Jeffrey Kottler and W. Paul Jones