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Publication Date:
January 2012
ISSN:
1860-7349
DOI:
10.1515/text-2012-0002

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Text & Talk

An Interdisciplinary Journal of Language, Discourse & Communication Studies

Ed. by Sarangi, Srikant

6 Issues per year

IMPACT FACTOR 2010: 0.493
5-year IMPACT FACTOR: 0.664
ERIH category 2011: INT1

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Issues

Extending client-centered support: counselors' proposals to shift from e-mail to telephone counseling

1Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the School of Education at the University of Queensland.

2Professor of Education in the Faculty of Education, and program leader in the Children and Youth Research Centre, at the Queensland University of Technology.

3Lecturer in the Department of Social Sciences at Loughborough University.

4Reader in the School of Social Sciences, University of Queensland, Australia.

c1Address for correspondence: School of Education, University of Queensland, St Lucia QLD 4072, Australia.

c2Address for correspondence: Faculty of Education, Early Childhood, Queensland University of Technology, Kelvin Grove, QLD 4059, Australia.

c3Address for correspondence: Department of Social Sciences, Loughborough University, Loughborough, Leicestershire LE11 3TU, England.

c4Address for correspondence: School of Social Sciences, University of Queensland, St Lucia QLD 4072, Australia.

Abstract

The availability and use of online counseling approaches has increased rapidly over the last decade. While research has suggested a range of potential affordances and limitations of online counseling modalities, very few studies have offered detailed examinations of how counselors and clients manage asynchronous e-mail counseling exchanges. In this paper we examine e-mail exchanges involving clients and counselors through Kids Helpline, a national Australian counseling service that offers free online, e-mail, and telephone counseling for young people up to the age of 25. We employ tools from the traditions of ethnomethodology and conversation analysis to analyze the ways in which counselors from Kids Helpline request that their clients call them, and hence change the modality of their counseling relationship, from e- mail to telephone counseling. This paper shows the counselors' three multilayered approaches in these e-mails as they negotiate the potentially delicate task of requesting and persuading a client to change the trajectory of their counseling relationship from text to talk without placing that relationship in jeopardy.

Keywords:: ethnomethodology; e-mail counseling; young people; online counseling; helplines; modality shifts

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