All courses
Psychology

Listening, Helping Skills, and Motivational Interviewing

Curated and verified byShine Zuo, Clinical Therapist, Columbia University
Study time: 8 hours
LanguagesEnglish · 简体中文 · Español
$14.00Lifetime access
Certificate of completionverifiable · shareable
Preview

# Listening, Helping Skills, and Motivational Interviewing You've probably heard it before: a patient who won't follow medical advice, a student who isn't engaged, an employee whose performance isn't improving. So you explain. You reason. You tell them what they need to do. And nothing changes. This isn't because the advice is wrong or because the person lacks willpower. It's because **people are more likely to change when they feel heard and respected than when they're told what to do**—and this paradox is the entire foundation of Motivational Interviewing. MI is a conversational method, grounded in decades of research, that works across helping contexts: healthcare, education, management, peer support, coaching. The core insight is deceptively simple: ask the right questions, listen deeply, recognize what someone already knows about their own situation, and reflect it back in a way that opens rather than closes. When people hear themselves say what they actually want and what matters to them, they're far more likely to act on it. This course teaches you how. You'll learn the four foundational skills—reflective listening, open questions, affirmations, and summaries—that form the backbone of every conversation. But more importantly, you'll learn to recognize the moments when someone is ambivalent, when they're stuck, when they're defending the status quo—and how to work skillfully with those real, messy human states instead of against them. You'll also learn the ethical and practical limits: when to stay in conversation, when to refer someone to specialized help, how to work respectfully across cultural difference, and how to know your own edges as a helper. Because MI isn't about manipulating someone into change; it's about creating conditions where their own wisdom can emerge. If you help people for a living—or if you're trying to support someone important to you in making a change—you'll find concrete, immediately usable skills here. And you'll understand why being heard is often more powerful than being told.

Lessons

About the course creator

Shine Zuo
Shine Zuo
Clinical Therapist, Columbia University

Three commitments guide Shine’s clinical practice: understand the whole person, choose interventions with purpose, and make treatment workable beyond the therapy room. Over eight years in outpatient clinics, schools, crisis programs, and private practice, she has supported adolescents and adults experiencing trauma, anxiety, depression, substance use, family conflict, and disruptive life transitions. Camille draws from cognitive-behavioral therapy, motivational interviewing, mindfulness, and family-systems approaches while adapting each plan to the client’s culture, relationships, strengths, and readiness for change. Her work also includes risk assessment, safety planning, therapeutic groups, clinical documentation, caregiver education, and coordination with psychiatrists, educators, physicians, and community agencies.

Reviews (2)

4.5 out of 5
  • jade_shepherd

    super helpful

  • savvy_ranger

    love it!