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Entry to the Play Therapy Profession

In order to provide support for as many children as possible, who have emotional, behaviour and mental health problems, Play Therapy International (PTI) welcomes entrants from many different professional backgrounds as well as those embarking on their first career. Personal qualities are very important (see below).

PTI offers careers advice for anyone interested in developing their career using therapeutic play skills or in becoming a Certified Play Therapist. Phone Monika Jephcott on +44 (0) 1825 761143 or email: contact@ptiworldwide.org


Contents Links
New Entrants & School Leavers
Mature Entrants
Arts, drama, music, movement and other creative arts therapists
Counsellors, psychotherapists, clinical psychologists and psychiatrists
Health Professionals
Teaching Professionals
Social Service Professionals
Care Professionals


Personal qualities
You will need to have the following attributes if you are to work effectively and ethically with children:

Empathy - the ability to understand how others feel - to put yourself in the client's position Experiential training will increase your understanding of what the children are feeling during play therapy. You will also need to empathise with parent/carers, referrers and others involved.
Sincerity - ‘you do what you say’

Integrity - straightforwardness, honesty and coherence.
To gain children's trust.
Resilience - work without being personally diminished.You must not let the ,sometimes harrowing children's experiences 'get to you'.
Respect - show appropriate esteem to othersNever patronise the children.
Humility - acknowledge own strengths and weaknessesNo one is perfect, the children will respect your admission of mistakes and weaknesses.
Competence - effective deployment of skillsPlay therapy competencies must be acquired through experiential training that is practice based.
Fairness - consistent decisions and actionsTreat all children equally - they will soon find out, if you don't
Wisdom - sound judgementThis comes through experience, clinical supervision, reflection on practise, clinical governance and continuous professional development.
CourageBeing able to take decisions and act in spite of known fears, risks, uncertainty and opposition.



School leavers who are interested in making a career in this field are advised to first undertake a degree course with some relevance such as childhood studies, psychology or social sciences ideally with an option involving children's development. They should then arrange to attend a one-day introductory course in order to decide if they wish to proceed to a post graduate Certificate, Diploma or MA programme accredited by PTI.


Mature entrants who have considerable experience of working with children but no relevant formal qualifications or a first level degree are also welcomed into the profession via perhaps stage 1 foundation or conversion courses. Because circumstances vary considerably it is best to seek advice using PTIs free career advisory service.


The profession badly needs your experience adapted to working with children. A Play Therapist requires a range of tools so that you will also be able to add other ways of working creatively to your existing skills.

You may be able to commence your play therapy training at Diploma stage according to your experience and aspirations. For more details see
Career Development Paths.


Play therapy offers you an opportunity to develop non talking therapy skills which you will be able to use with adults as well as children. Therapeutic play skills will also be useful systemically in, for example, working with families where children are an important issue.

You may be able to commence your play therapy training at Diploma stage according to your experience and aspirations. For more details see
Career Development - Part 1 (Practitioner paths).


May use play therapy to assist children in transition and to support children who have suffered abuse, trauma, attachment problems and loss. Play therapy is valuable for children on the autistic spectrum and with other physical / developmental disabilities.

For more details see
Career Development - Part 1 (Practitioner paths).

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