Using text-based synchronous chat to offer therapeutic support to students: A systematic review of the research literature

Zehra Ersahin, Terry Hanley

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Objective: Counselling within educational settings has now become commonplace. As with the advent of the use of new technologies in teaching, such developments are also impacting upon the broader support structures in place for students. One development is the move of schools to offer pupils access to online counselling services. To date such practices have received little attention and this paper synthesises the existing empirical research literature in this area.
Design: A systematic Review of the literature was conducted which focused upon synchronous chat counselling for 11-25 year olds.
Method: Key bibliographic databases were searched for relevant papers. These were assessed for relevance and quality prior to being included into the analysis. The final selection of studies were analysed for key themes.
Results: 19 papers met the inclusion criteria. The thematic synthesis identified four higher order themes: (1) developing safe and youth friendly online services, (2) online client characteristics, (3) in-session online processes and (4) session alliance and outcome.
Conclusion: These themes outline the varied challenges and opportunities present within this developing practice. Each is initially discussed alongside existing literature related to online counselling before the implications for educational providers are explicitly considered. Ultimately it is concluded that online counselling for students has much potential however those commissioning such services need to be mindful of common pitfalls.
Original languageEnglish
JournalHealth Education Journal
Early online date30 Apr 2017
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

Keywords

  • online counselling
  • Young people
  • student support and guidance
  • synchronous chat

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