“…Ridley, D. Mollen and S.M. Kelly (2011), which include cognitive, affective, and behavioural components, the model has the integrated deep structure, which consists of 5 metacognitions: purposefulness, motivation, selection, sequencing, and timing; career counselling self-efficacy and multicultural counselling competence (Vespia et al, 2010;Mani, 2020); the study on competence-based education principles and performances applied to guidance career curriculum and in-service training programs and need to acquire strategic competences (Alvarez-Rojo, Romero-Rodriguez, 2007); competence to use the dialogue in career guidance of students (Soika, 2017); value identification methods helping career counsellors to identify career counselling boundaries as well as act professionally, ethically and wisely in assessing any particular situation (Racene, Dislere, 2019); skills for career counsellorempathy, insight, communication and listening, flexibility and tolerance (Blank, 2017); the most frequently methods used in career counselling by L. Damberga (2013) are: clarification of values, card sorting method, SWOT analysis, interest inventory survey, case study, personal project, decision making, visualisation, life-space mapping, future visions, experience assessment, tree of life, way of life, role play, problem solving, decision making. The career counsellor must be able to apply these methods in working with the client.…”