Ce diaporama a bien été signalé.
Le téléchargement de votre SlideShare est en cours. ×

Tugas interpersonal skill Helping and Facilitating

Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Chargement dans…3
×

Consultez-les par la suite

1 sur 15 Publicité

Plus De Contenu Connexe

Diaporamas pour vous (20)

Similaire à Tugas interpersonal skill Helping and Facilitating (20)

Publicité
Publicité

Tugas interpersonal skill Helping and Facilitating

  1. 1. Helping and Facilitating Faeqal Hafidh Muhammad Asfiant 4520210085
  2. 2. What is facilitation The shorter Oxford English Dictionary defines facilitation as rendering easier, promoting, helping forward, and assisting. To a greater or lesser extent, we are all facilitators. Sometimes people think of helping as something that is concerned exclusively with assisting others to manage their problems and sometimes require help to identify and take advantage of opportunities offered by changed circumstances or potential career moves, or to recognize their own strengths and to exploit them to the full.
  3. 3. Different approaches to helping Theorising Advising Supporting Challenging
  4. 4. 01 Theorising What is it?
  5. 5. Identifying theories and conceptual models that are pertinent to the clients’ problem situation, helping them to learn to use them to facilitate a better understanding of their situation in an analytical cause- and-effect fashion. Theorising
  6. 6. Giving an Advice! Advising
  7. 7. Make sure to be always open minded ! ● Guidance or recommendations offered with regard to prudent future action. ● One danger with this approach is that clients become dependent on others. They learn to look to the helper for a solution and they are not helped to learn how to solve problems for themselves. Advising
  8. 8. Supporting Sympathy Bearing all or part of the weight of something Chatting Talking or Listening to them in hope that they would express their feeling Hold No Judge Be understanding, empathetically.
  9. 9. Challenging testing one's abilities; demanding. inviting competition; provocative. The Aim. The aim of this approach is to identify alternative values and assumptions that may lead to the development of more effective solutions to problems.
  10. 10. Information gathering What is it? This approach to helping involves us assisting the client in collecting data that can be used to evaluate and reinterpret the problem situation.
  11. 11. Stages in the helping process Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Identifying and clarifying problem situations and unused opportunities Goal setting: developing a more desirable scenario Helping clients act
  12. 12. Empathy Empathy is the capacity to understand or feel what another person is experiencing from within their frame of reference, that is, the capacity to place oneself in another's position.
  13. 13. Giving feedback Clients’ ability to manage their own problems can be fettered by limited or incorrect perceptions, especially about themselves and their relations with others. Feedback that offers clients new information about themselves can help them develop alternative perspectives on problems.
  14. 14. Not all feedback is helpful Helpful feedback is descriptive, not judgemental. Helpful feedback is specific, not general. Helpful feedback is relevant to the needs of the client. Helpful feedback is solicited rather than imposed. Helpful feedback is timely and in context. Helpful feedback is usable and concerned with behaviour over which the client is able to exercise control. Feedback can only be helpful when it has been heard and understood.

×