Tudor, K: Freedom to Practise
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 sep 2007
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781898059974
ISBN-10: 1898059977
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: Illustrations (some col.)
Dimensiuni: 235 x 159 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: PCCS Books
Locul publicării:United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1898059977
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: Illustrations (some col.)
Dimensiuni: 235 x 159 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: PCCS Books
Locul publicării:United Kingdom
Notă biografică
Keith Tudor has worked for 25 years in the helping professions in a number of settings. He is a qualified and registered psychotherapist and was in private/independent practice in Sheffield offering therapy, supervision and consultancy. In 1993 he co-founded Temenos, an independent training organisation, which runs courses in person-centred psychotherapy and counselling, and supervision. In 2009 he moved to the University of Auckland, New Zealand. He is a widely published author in the field of psychotherapy and counselling, and mental health and has now published six books. Mike Worrall read English at Oxford, worked for the Probation Service and trained in the person-centred approach at The Metanoia Institute in London. He works in independent practice in Oxford, and is an occasional trainer at Temenos in Sheffield.
Cuprins
Part One--ProcessChapter 1 Choosing a Supervisor Carolin Friederike HerwigChapter 2 Supervision as Maieutic Process: The birthing of insight Louise Embleton Tudor and Mike WorrallChapter 3 Responsibilities in Supervision Keith TudorChapter 4 Using Appreciative Inquiry in Person-centred Supervision Julie BarnesPart Two--TraditionsChapter 5 Person-centred Expressive Supervision Jenny BellChapter 6 Student-centered Supervision for Pre-Therapy Garry Prouty and Dion Van WerdePart Three--FormChapter 7 Group Supervision Keith TudorChapter 8 E-mail Supervision Colin Lago and Jeannie WrightPart Four--Debates, Developments and DomainsChapter 9 Supervision and Training of 'Rogers-1' and 'Rogers-2' Therapists: Basic concepts and methods Marvin Frankel and Lisbeth SommerbeckChapter 10 Hoops, Hurdles and Thresholds: Supervising therapists through training and qualification Geraldine ThomsonChapter 11 Supervising a Therapist Through a ComplaintWendy TraynorChapter 12 Supervision as Continuing Personal Development Keith Tudor and Mike WorrallChapter 13 Supervision in the Dock? Supervision and the Law Peter JenkinsChapter 14 Supervision of Short-term Therapy Keith TudorChapter 15 Person-centred Supervision Across Theoretical Orientations Mike WorrallPart Five--TrainingChapter 16 Training Supervisors Keith Tudor and Mike Worrall
Recenzii
'... Freedom to Practise (Binnie and Titchen, 1999), the best book on nursing I have read for a long time.'
Jane Salvage, Nursing Times, November 2000
'Within the context of my thirty years plus of experience in this particular field, I have never read a more thorough, more interesting, or more practical discussion of the practice development process.'
Marie Manthey
'... there are nurses who continue to grapple with the problem of how a patient-centred service can be successfully developed and for me, the most influential is Alison Binnie. Last year Alison Binnie and Angie Titchen published the results of an action research study on the development of patient-centred care in their book "Freedom to Practice". This book motivated, inspired and excited me because it describes the logistical problems of changing nursing practice that reflect my own experiences. It tells it like it really is.'
Eileen Shepherd RGN DipN, editorial advisor to the Nursing Times, writing in Nursing Times, Jan 27 2000, Vol 96, No 4.
Jane Salvage, Nursing Times, November 2000
'Within the context of my thirty years plus of experience in this particular field, I have never read a more thorough, more interesting, or more practical discussion of the practice development process.'
Marie Manthey
'... there are nurses who continue to grapple with the problem of how a patient-centred service can be successfully developed and for me, the most influential is Alison Binnie. Last year Alison Binnie and Angie Titchen published the results of an action research study on the development of patient-centred care in their book "Freedom to Practice". This book motivated, inspired and excited me because it describes the logistical problems of changing nursing practice that reflect my own experiences. It tells it like it really is.'
Eileen Shepherd RGN DipN, editorial advisor to the Nursing Times, writing in Nursing Times, Jan 27 2000, Vol 96, No 4.