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Counseling Skills for Speech-Language Pathologists and Audiologists
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Table of Contents

Part I: FOUNDATIONS OF COUNSELING SKILLS.
1. The Basics.
2. Theories Of Counseling And How They Relate To Speech-3. Language Pathology and Audiology.
4. The Therapeutic Relationship and Therapeutic Communication.
5. Interviewing and Therapy Microskills.
6. Multicultural Competencies.
7. Working with Families.
Part II: COUNSELING SKILLS FOR WORKING WITH SPECIFIC DISORDERS
COUNSELING SKILLS FOR WORKING WITH SPEECH, LANGUAGE, FLUENCY, VOICE, AND CLEFT LIP AND PALATE DISORDERS.
8. Counseling Skills for Working with Adult Neurological Disorders and Dysphagia.
9. Counseling for Adults and Children Who Have Hearing Loss.
Part III: THE THERAPEUTIC PROCESS WITH CHALLENGIN SITUATIONS AND BEHAVIORS.
10. Defense Mechanisms Relevant To Speech-Language Pathologists and Audiologists.
11. Working with Challenging and Difficult Emotional States.
12. Communicating Bad News and Working with Challenging Situations.
13. Working with Resistance and Anger.
14. Working with Crisis Situations.
15. Taking Care of Ourselves.
Appendix.
Glossary.
References.
Index.

About the Author

Lydia V. Flasher earned her baccalaureate summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Duke University, and her master's and doctorate in clinical psychology from Vanderbilt University. Her mentor at Vanderbilt was Hans H. Strupp, a pioneer in psychotherapy research and short-term dynamic psychotherapy. After completing her internship at the Montreal Children's Hospital, a McGill University teaching hospital, she worked as a staff psychologist in the hospital, specializing in personality assessment, family therapy, and health psychology in pediatric oncology. Dr. Flasher has served as a professor at Colorado State University and the University of the Pacific and has many years of experience teaching graduate students in clinical and counseling psychology. She has served as director of a university training clinic for doctoral students in counseling psychology and has approximately 20 years of experience supervising psychology graduate students, interns, and postdoctoral fellows. Currently, Dr. Flasher serves as Director of the Psychology Training Programs and as staff psychologist at the Children's Health Council in Palo Alto, California. In her administrative role, she is co-director for an APA-approved, pre-doctoral psychology internship consortium between Stanford University's Packard Children's Hospital and Children's Health Council. She also directs a clinical psychology postdoctoral fellowship program. In her direct clinical work, she specializes in multidisciplinary assessments, anxiety disorders, and family therapy. Paul T. Fogle, Ph.D., CCC-SLP earned his Bachelor of Arts and his Masters of Arts at California State University, Long Beach. After receiving his M.A., he started the first high school aphasia class in California, working with adolescents who had sustained traumatic brain injuries, strokes, and other neurological impairments. Dr. Fogle also worked as a therapist at the UCLA Psychology Adult Stuttering Clinic during this time. Dr. Fogle earned his doctorate from the University of Iowa and went on to teach undergraduate courses on Introduction to Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, Anatomy and Physiology of Speech, and Speech Science. At the graduate level he has taught Neurological Disorders in Adults, Motor Speech Disorders, Dysphagia/Swallowing Disorders, Gerontology, Voice Disorders, Cleft Palate and Oral-Facial Anomalies, and Counseling Skills for Speech-Language Pathologists. Dr. Fogle has worked extensively in hospitals while also maintaining a year-round private practice for over 35 years. He has presented at state, ASHA, international (IALP), and Asia-Pacific Society for the Study of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology conferences. Dr. Fogle has been involved with forensic speech-language pathology (court testifying as an expert witness) for over 25 years and has published and presented on that topic. Most recently he has been the speech-language pathologist on Rotaplast (Rotary) International Cleft Palate teams in Venezuela, Egypt, and India.

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Part I: FOUNDATIONS OF COUNSELING SKILLS. 1. The Basics. 2. Theories Of Counseling And How They Relate To Speech-3. Language Pathology and Audiology. 4. The Therapeutic Relationship and Therapeutic Communication. 5. Interviewing and Therapy Microskills. 6. Multicultural Competencies. 7. Working with Families. Part II: COUNSELING SKILLS FOR WORKING WITH SPECIFIC DISORDERS COUNSELING SKILLS FOR WORKING WITH SPEECH, LANGUAGE, FLUENCY, VOICE, AND CLEFT LIP AND PALATE DISORDERS. 8. Counseling Skills for Working with Adult Neurological Disorders and Dysphagia. 9. Counseling for Adults and Children Who Have Hearing Loss. Part III: THE THERAPEUTIC PROCESS WITH CHALLENGIN SITUATIONS AND BEHAVIORS. 10. Defense Mechanisms Relevant To Speech-Language Pathologists and Audiologists. 11. Working with Challenging and Difficult Emotional States. 12. Communicating Bad News and Working with Challenging Situations. 13. Working with Resistance and Anger. 14. Working with Crisis Situations. 15. Taking Care of Ourselves. Appendix. Glossary. References. Index.

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