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In Episode 371 of the Counselling Tutor Podcast, your hosts Rory Lees-Oakes and Ken Kelly explore three key topics relevant to counsellors and counselling students.
Firstly, in ‘Ethical, Sustainable Practice’, they introduce the emerging conversation around AI in counselling, exploring whether therapists are being left behind and how practitioners can engage with AI ethically.
Then in ‘Practice Matters’, Rory speaks with Jessica Wing about preparing to meet your very first client, sharing insights to help students transition from classroom practice to real therapeutic work.
And finally, in ‘Student Services’, Rory and Ken clarify the difference between humanism and person-centred therapy, a common area of confusion for counselling students studying theoretical models.
In this section, Rory and Ken explore the growing role of AI in counselling and why therapists cannot afford to ignore the conversation.
Key points discussed include:

Real Sessions – Real Presentations – Real Skills
Gain the competence and confidence to use counselling techniques effectively!
In this week’s Practice Matters, Rory speaks with counsellor and trainer Jessica Wing about preparing to see your first client as a counselling student.
Key points from this conversation include:

On-demand access to a rich lecture library covering theory, skills, and professional development for counselling students—Mapped to the UK awarding body criteria
“The Student Library has been BRILLIANT, I can’t recommend it enough!
It has been a lifeline in helping me prepare for practice and my first clients. If you’re considering it, go-for-it, it’s absolutely worth it!”
Kelly – Graduated and now in practice.
In this section, Rory and Ken unpack the difference between humanism and person-centred therapy (PCT), a distinction that often confuses counselling students.
Key points include:
Here is a full handout on this topic:
The terms humanistic psychology and person-centred therapy (PCT) are often used interchangeably, but they refer to different levels of theory and practice.
Humanistic psychology emerged in the mid-20th century, associated with figures such as Abraham Maslow, Carl Rogers and Rollo May. It became known as the “third force” in psychology, following psychoanalysis and behaviourism.
Humanism proposes that people are fundamentally oriented toward growth, meaning and creativity when the right conditions are present.
Key Ideas
In therapy, humanism is an umbrella term that includes several approaches, such as:
These approaches share a focus on human potential, authenticity and lived experience.
Person-centred therapy was developed by Carl Rogers as a specific approach within the humanistic tradition.
Central to Rogers’ theory is the actualising tendency – the natural human drive toward growth and psychological health.
Rogers described several conditions necessary for therapeutic change. Three key therapist attitudes are:
Person-centred therapy is intentionally non-directive. The client leads the process while the therapist provides the facilitative relational climate for change.
Humanistic psychology
A broad philosophy about human nature and helping.
Person-centred therapy
A specific therapeutic model developed by Rogers.
Humanism influences therapy, education, organisational work and personal development.
Person-centred therapy describes a specific way of practising counselling, centred on the relationship and the core conditions.
Humanistic practitioners may integrate techniques while maintaining a humanistic philosophy.
Classical person-centred therapists prioritise the relational conditions and tend to avoid structured techniques or therapist-led agendas.
The broad philosophy that sees people as growth-oriented and best understood through their subjective experience.
Carl Rogers’ specific, non-directive therapeutic approach built around empathy, unconditional positive regard and congruence.

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