module specification

SS5091 - Counselling in youth and community settings (2023/24)

Module specification Module approved to run in 2023/24
Module title Counselling in youth and community settings
Module level Intermediate (05)
Credit rating for module 15
School School of Social Sciences and Professions
Total study hours 150
 
20 hours Assessment Preparation / Delivery
94 hours Guided independent study
36 hours Scheduled learning & teaching activities
Assessment components
Type Weighting Qualifying mark Description
Other 30%   Triad Counselling Skills Practice
Coursework 30%   800 Word assignment
Coursework 40%   1000 Word Reflective journals
Running in 2023/24

(Please note that module timeslots are subject to change)
Period Campus Day Time Module Leader
Spring semester North Wednesday Afternoon

Module summary

This module will embrace the notion of social justice, compassion, and inclusion. This is key to our Education for Social Justice Framework at London Metropolitan University

 

Rationale:

To introduce and familiarise students with key concepts of counselling in Youth and community settings and their implications in different professional contexts. This module requires students to explore and develop the basic skills needed for counselling and recognise the difference between listening to others as friends, parents, youth and community work practitioners or as counsellors. Due to the experiential nature of the course there is scope for personal development.  Many of the exercises will focus on practising skills necessary for counselling and there will be theoretical inputs on the main influences in this area. The aim of the module is for students’ to be introduced to key concepts of counselling and provide a world perspective.  The module will involve the students in active group learning, sharing some of their own experiences with other group members.  The course will be very practical with the learning being conducted in the large group, small groups, triads and pairs.  Emphasis will be placed on learning basic listening skills, finding out what counselling is, how it relates to the student in youth and community work settings, and recognising the importance of developing self-awareness.

In total there are three counselling modules, one at each level.  It is envisaged that they correspond to the L1, L2 & L3 of the training structure that prospective counsellors have to undertake with regards to the hours and assessment strategies prior to attending the L4 Diploma in Counselling.

The successful completion of one module is the equivalent of L1.

The successful completion of two modules is the equivalent of L2.

The successful completion of three modules is the equivalent of the L3 qualification.

The module at L5 is an optional module for all the students in the University programmes and will be very much focused on developing counselling skills in working with young people in a variety of youth and community settings ranging from work in formal settings e.g schools, through to informal settings including detached work.

The modules at L5 & L6 will be optional modules.  As such there will be an opportunity for all students to cover some of the basic skills in particular settings and working in groups respectively.  For those with more experience it will enable them to develop their personal journey at a much deeper level and this will be reflected in the quality of their journal submissions, the depth of the essay question and the enhanced quality of their practical counselling intervention skills.

The assessment processes will be the same to reflect the methods of assessments used on the pre Diploma courses.

It aims to:

  • Evaluate concepts of counselling in a world perspective and its role in youth and community work settings and analyse key approaches, core conditions and models of counselling.
  • Develop an awareness of their own self-development and how they are able to use counselling skills to help develop others.
  • Identify, examine and analyse diversity issues while working with people from different gender, race and sexualities and power dynamics and the importance of anti-oppressive practice.

Prior learning requirements

None

Syllabus

The syllabus will encourage students to think critically about issues affecting oppression in contemporary contexts and introduce theory, practice and applied youth work principles in relation to the following themes:

Indicative Content

  1. What is Counselling? LO2 LO4
  2. Eurocentric and world approaches to counselling. LO4 
  3. Person-centred/humanistic approaches, Cognitive-behavioural approaches, Psychodynamic approaches & LO1 LO2 
  4. Integrative approaches, Egan’s 3 stage model of counselling. LO1 LO2 
  5. Exploring Existential, Transcultural, Gestalt and the myriad forms of counselling that exist and the contexts in which they are applied. LO1 LO2 
  6. The key skills of paraphrasing, reflecting feelings, communication and active listening skills LO1 LO2 LO3 LO5 
  7. Where group work skills and counselling meet / diverge? LO1 LO2 LO3 LO5
  8. Issues of power and anti-oppressive practice, addressing diversity issues (gender, race, sexualities) within counselling relationships LO2 LO4 LO5 
  9. Appropriating knowledge and the colonisation of the mind of the oppressed LO2 LO5 
  10. The impact of migration and how it affects young people and communities LO1 LO4

Balance of independent study and scheduled teaching activity

The module will be taught by a blended learning approach to lecture and critical discussion. There will be a focus on triads and counselling real life experiences.

A student-centred approach will be adopted in teaching and learning on the module, relying on class discussions/activities, reflections.

Learning outcomes

  1. Ensure that work with young people and communities remains within the professional boundaries of a youth and community worker's role and that of other related professionals and the core conditions of Person-centred Counselling (LO1).
  2. Evaluate the core conditions of counselling and how they link to the principles and values of youth and community work and identify organisational policies, procedures and legislation which support or contradict these values (LO2).
  3. Identify and analyse the connection between personal values, youth and community work values and behaviour in practice and analyse the use and abuse of power in micro and macro contexts within the field of counselling (LO3).
  4. Evaluate key concepts in counselling and how they inform interventions in different professional contexts and how they have been dominated by western european concepts (LO4).
  5. Implement Anti-Oppressive Practice (AOP) effectively and with due regards to the principles and values of Counselling and youth and community work and allied professions. (LO5)

Assessment strategy

Formative assessment, and draft work is considered and commented on. Comments on draft work are provided a week before the final hand in date, so that students have opportunities to amend their work.

 

The learning of the module will be assessed through two methods:

  1. Students will need to demonstrate in front of the group their counselling skills in a 30 minute Triad session.
  2. A 800 word assignment
  3. 1000 word Weekly reflective journals.

Bibliography

https://rl.talis.com/3/londonmet/lists/3DB9ABA2-148F-9954-43FD-47D23A8703CD.html?lang=en-US