Chapter 1. Introduction – Sujata Sriram.- Chapter 2. Counsellor’s Characteristics and their Experiences – Swarnima Bhargava & Sujata Sriram.- Chapter 3. The Experience of Being a Novice Counsellor - Chetna Duggal & Mithila Rao.- Chapter 4. The Personal and Professional Lives of Counsellors - Sindhuja Vummidi & Sandhya Limaye.- Chapter 5. Exploration of Therapists' Personal and Professional Values – Rashmi Rangarajan & Chetna Duggal.- Chapter 6. Beginning the Journey: What motivates therapists to join the profession? – Chetna Duggal & Sujata Sriram.- Chapter 7. Training in Counselling: Current Status and Trainer's Perspectives – Sujata Sriram & Sneha Nikam.- Chapter 8. Exploring Expressions: Using the Creative Arts in Therapy - Afshan Mariam & Aparna Joshi.- Chapter 9. The Role of the School Counsellor – Sindhura Tammana.- Chapter 10. Marital Counselling in India: Perspectives from Family Court Counsellors – Sujata Sriram & Chetna Duggal.- Chapter 11. Telephone Counselling in India: Lessons from iCALL – Sujata Sriram, Aparna Joshi, Paras Sharma.- Chapter 12. Conclusion and Directions for Future Research – Sujata Sriram.
Sujata Sriram, PhD, is Associate
Professor and Dean, School of Human Ecology, Tata Institute of Social Sciences,
Mumbai. Previously she was Reader at the Department of Child Development,
Lady Irwin College, University of Delhi. She was awarded the Fulbright
Nehru Senior Research Fellowship in 2010-11 to the Department of Anthropology,
University of California, San Diego and has also been a guest researcher
at the Department of Psychology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology.
This volume provides a critical and reflexive view into the
counselling profession in India. Counselling and psychotherapy are emergent
fields in India; there is inadequate synergy between theory and practice at
present, as psychotherapy and counselling practice in the field have not
sufficiently informed research, and vice versa. While research on counselling,
the counselling process and training, and development of counsellors is
extremely vital for the growth of the profession, practitioners seldom feel the
need to wear the lens of the researcher.
Drawing upon primary research on
counsellors and psychotherapists in different parts of India, this volume
bridges this gap and discusses the personal and professional journeys of
counsellors at various stages of their career, which in turn facilitates
further research on counselling in India. The chapters discuss practical issues
like the challenges faced by novice counsellors, which contribute to feelings
of inadequacy and incompetence; synergy between the personal and professional
lives of counsellors and the effect of the counselling process on the self;
elements that go into training and how counselling education could be
positioned and developed; the use of creative arts in therapy; and the role of
school counsellors and the process of negotiating boundaries among various
stakeholders in the school system. The volume also examines ethical dilemmas in
the field, which have wider policy ramifications.