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Self & Society
An International Journal for Humanistic Psychology
Volume 34, 2006 - Issue 1
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Original Articles

Fit for Purpose: The Organisation of Psychotherapy Training

Pages 33-40 | Published online: 21 Jan 2015
 

Abstract

Compared with the libraries of literature on the practice and theory of therapy (psychotherapy and counselling), there is surprisingly little on the theory or practice of teaching or training therapists. Few of the founding fathers and mothers of psychotherapy wrote about the pedagogy of psychotherapy. A major exception to this was Carl Rogers, the founder of client-centred therapy, now more commonly referred to as the person-centred approach, who wrote a chapter on the training of therapists in his seminal work Client-Centered Therapy (published in 1951) and, later, a book on his philosophy of and approach to education, which is summarised in its title, Freedom to Learn (Rogers, 1969). He himself later revised this for a second edition (in 1983) and, after his death, a colleague, H. Jerome Freiberg, made further revisions for a third edition (published in 1994).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Keith Tudor

Keith Tudor is a qualified and registered psychotherapist, based in Sheffield, and a founding Director of Temenos. He is the author/editor of seven books, and of a series on ‘Advancing Theory in Therapy’ (published by Routledge). He is an Honorary Fellow in the School of Health, Liverpool John Moores University.

Paul Lewin

Paul Lewin has a background in the information systems industry. He was a student at Temenos, following which he went on to obtain a Master's degree in Sustainable Development from the Institute of Energy and Sustainable Development at De Montfort University. Since 2004 he has been the Operations Manager of Temenos.

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