This book has already helped thousands of beginning practitioners understand the subtleties of the person-centred approach and develop skills in person-centred counseling practice. Now in its Second Edition, this step-by-step guide takes the reader through the counseling process, providing advice on how to structure and manage therapeutic work in ways which are thoroughly grounded in person-centred principles. Janet Tolan defines the key tenets of the approach - psychological contact, congruence, empathy and unconditional positive regard - and demonstrates how they are used effectively in a range of counsellor-client interactions.
One of the few introductory PCC books that properly covers the contradictions, social contexts, dynamics of power in the relationship, newer research, debates and radical approaches. I'd say it's more essential than a lot of students are made aware of.
This book explains the basic concepts of person-centred therapy fairly well, and gives a philosophical overview of the importance of person-centred therapy. It has many useful examples such as how to deal with clients who lie about something important in their lives and examples such as these add to my understanding of a therapeutic relationship and are quite helpful, but I would not recommend this book as an introductory text to students new to this technique.
This is a solid step-by-step introduction to person-centered therapy. Tolan and Cameron provide ample material to think about, exercises to stretch the therapist, and strategically developing ideas throughout the book. However, some chapters are much more simplistic than they should be overall it's a strong addition to any therapist from the PC modality. It's also organized in a lively and easy-to-digest way.
My favourite person-centred counselling book so far. Informative, covered all aspects of theory, incorporating new research into the 'other characteristic'.
Clear and easy to follow. Very interesting but it left me wondering if person-centred counselling or psychotherapy is effective. It seems a bit "soft" and vague. As a credit to the book it made me want to know more.