CHCCSL002 Apply Specialist Interpersonal and Counselling Interview Skills
Overview
This module introduces you to the communication skills used in effective counselling practice. You will learn about the communication process, microskills, specialist counselling interview skills, and how to ensure effective counselling communication practice.
Trigger Warning
This module may include content that deals with sensitive and emotionally challenging topics. Some of the topics covered in this course may include trauma, abuse, addiction, mental health issues, and relationship difficulties. These topics may evoke strong emotions, memories, or reactions in some learners. It is important to prioritise your own self-care and seek support as needed.
If you feel uncomfortable or overwhelmed, please do not hesitate to reach out to your trainer, student services or a mental health professional for support. The following services may be helpful:
- Service Finder Lifeline Australia
- Bark - find a Counsellor
- Australian Counselling Association - find a registered Counsellor
SECTION 1: An Introduction to Effective Communication
This first section of the module will provide you with an introduction to effective communication, including the kinds of communication barriers you might encounter and how to overcome them. You will also learn about how learning styles can affect communication.
SECTION 2: Microskills and the Counselling Interview
In this section, you will learn more about the keys skills that you will need in order to communicate effectively with a client and create a successful therapeutic relationship in the context of the counselling interview.
SECTION 3: Specialist Counselling Communication Skills
In this section, you learn how to appropriately use specialist counselling skills such as challenging, focusing, and reframing. You will learn how to use these skills to enhance client development and growth.
SECTION 4: Counselling Practice
In this final section, you will learn more about effective counselling practice, including the importance of self-reflection and its role in skill and self-development as well as issues of note-taking.
Unit Title
CHCCSL002 – Apply specialist interpersonal and counselling interview skills
Unit Purpose
This unit describes the skills and knowledge required to use advanced interpersonal communication skills to facilitate the client-counsellor relationship in a counselling practice.
Prerequisites
There are no pre-requisites for this unit
Content
Section 1: An introduction to effective communication
Section 2: Microskills and the counselling interview
Section 3: Specialist counselling communication skills
Section 4: Counselling practice
Resources/Readings
Readings A – H are located directly after the learning material for this module.
Suggested Hours
Although everyone will work at their own pace, we suggest you allow approximately 60 hours to complete this unit competently, including seminars, tutorials, assignments and practical activities.
Timeframe
The recommended time frame for this unit is 4 weeks.
Assessment
This unit will be assessed by completing the CHCCSL002 Assessments.
Upon completion of this unit, you should be able to:
Element | Performance Criteria |
---|---|
1. Communicate effectively |
1.1. Identify communication barriers and use strategies to overcome these barriers in the client-counsellor relationship |
2. Use specialised counselling interviewing skills |
2.1 Select and use communication skills according to the sequence of a counselling interview |
3. Evaluate own communication |
3.1 Reflect on and evaluate own communication with clients |
Knowledge Evidence
The candidate must be able to demonstrate essential knowledge required to effectively do the task outlined in elements and performance criteria of this unit, manage the task and manage contingencies in the context of the work role. This includes knowledge of:
- Legal and ethical considerations for communication in counselling practice, and how these are applied in individual practice:
- Codes of conduct/practice
- Discrimination
- Duty of care
- Human rights
- Practitioner/client boundaries
- Privacy, confidentiality and disclosure
- Rights and responsibilities of workers, employers and clients
- Work role boundaries – responsibilities and limitations of the counsellor role
- Work health and safety
- Principles of person-centred practice
- Key objectives of counselling interviewing
- Stages of a counselling interview
- Potential impacts of using different communication skills and techniques in counselling contexts
- Communication techniques and micro-skills including:
- Attending behaviours – active listening, reflection of content feeling, summarising
- Questioning skills – open, closed, simple and compound questions
- Client observation skills
- Noting and reflecting skills
- Providing client feedback
- Specialised counselling communication techniques and how they are used, including:
- Challenging
- Reframing
- Focusing
- Components of the communication process including:
- Encoder
- Decoder
- Primary factors that impact on the communication process including:
- Context
- Participants
- Rules
- Messages
- Channels
- Noise
- Feedback
- Communication barriers and resolution strategies, including:
- Environmental
- Physical
- Individual perceptions
- Cultural issues
- Language
- Age issues
- Disability
- Mechanisms that enhance effective interpersonal communication
- Observational techniques, including:
- Facial expressions
- Non-verbal behaviour
- Posture
- Silence
- Ways in which different people absorb information, including:
- Visual
- Auditory
- Kinaesthetic
- Obstacles to the counselling process
- Impacts of trauma and stress on the communication process, including on:
- Concentration and attention
- Memory
- Use of verbal and written language
- Use of body language
- Challenging within the counselling session
- Self-evaluation practices, including:
- How to recognise own biases
- Impact of own values on the counselling relationship
Performance Evidence
The candidate must show evidence of the ability to complete tasks outlined in elements and performance criteria of this unit, manage tasks and manage contingencies in the context of the job role. There must be evidence that the candidate has:
- interviewed at least 3 different clients using specialised interpersonal communication and counselling interviewing skills, including:
- micro-skills and communication techniques, including:
- attending behaviours – active listening,
- reflection of content, summarising
- questioning skills – open, closed, simple and compound questions
- client observation skills
- noting and reflecting skills
- providing client feedback
- specialised counselling interviewing skills, including:
- challenging
- reframing
- focussing
- integrated clear case note taking into the interview process
- completed a structured process of self-reflection and evaluation of own communication used during the 3 interviews.
- micro-skills and communication techniques, including: