COUN 660

Advanced Theory and Practice of Counseling

Spring 2010 8:15—10:45

Claxton 209

Instructor:Dr. Tricia McClamOffice Hours: Tuesday 1:00—2:30 and by

Office:448 Claxton Complexappointment

Office Phone: 974-3845Emergency Contact: Amanda Rieger

Email: or 974-8864

Required Text

Selected readings may be found on Blackboard.

Bankart, C. Peter. 1997). Talking cures: A history of western and eastern psychotherapies. Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks/Cole. (Selected chapters).

Conte, C. (2009). Introduction: Techniques of Counseling and Psychotherapy. In Advanced Techniques for Counseling and Psychotherapy. NY: Springer Publishing.

Nash, M. (2001, July). The truth and the hype of hypnosis. Scientific American. 47-55.

Patterson, C. H. ( 1966). Theories ofcounseling and psychotherapy. NY: Harper & Row.

(Selected chapters).

Course Description

An in-depth exploration of theories of human nature and the practice of counseling (3 credit hours)

Methods of Instruction

Lecture, discussion, case studies, presentations by invited experts and class members

Course Objectives

Objectives for this course match the requirements for CACREP Standards (2009). They include:

INPUT STANDARDS (COVER THESE IN ASSIGNMENTS, READINGS, TASKS, ACTIVITIES, ETC.)

KNOWLEDGE

C.Learning experiences beyond the entrylevel are required in all of the following content areas:

1.Theories pertaining to the principles and practice of counseling and crises, disasters, and other trauma causing events

OUTPUT STANDARDS (EVALUATIVE RUBRICS FOR EACH ASSIGNMENT)

TEACHING

D.Skill and Practices

2. Demonstrates course design, delivery, and evaluation methods appropriate to course objectives.

G.Knowledge

1.Knows the major counseling theories, including their strengths and weaknesses, theoretical bases for efficacy, applicability to multicultural populations, and ethical/legal considerations.

2.Understands various methods for evaluating counseling effectiveness.

3.Understands the research base for existing counseling theories.

4. Understands the effectiveness of models and treatment strategies of crises, disasters, and other trauma-causing events.

Personal Dispositions

As of fall, 2008, the Counseling Program has adopted a set of personal dispositions to be demonstrated by all students. You can use the acronym CORIS (pronounced ‘chorus’) to help you remember them. The dispositions include:

Commitment, including counseling identity, investment, advocacy, collaboration, and interpersonal competence

Openness to idea, learning, change, giving and receiving feedback, others, and self-development

Respect to self and others, including honoring diversity, self-care, and wellness

Integrity, including personal responsibility, maturity, honesty, courage, and congruence

Self-awareness, including humility, self-reflection, and understanding of place in history

All students will be expected to model these dispositions during class meetings.

Writing Quality

All written work is expected to be mechanically and grammatically correct (i.e., APA style, well-organized, correct spelling, noun-verb agreement, proof-read, edited, etc.). Evaluation of all written work will reflect the quality of the writing as well as the content. All work should be typewritten, in 12-point font (preferably Times New Roman), double-spaced, with one-inch margins, and stapled. Additionally, if you choose to use any materials or ideas borrowed from other sources other than your own creative head, you must attach a full reference list of these sources using APA style and cite these ideas in the body of the paper using APA style.

UTK Honor Statement and Pledge

An essential feature of The University of Tennessee, Knoxville is a commitment to maintaining an atmosphere of intellectual integrity and academic honesty. As a student of the University, you pledge that you will neither knowingly give nor receive any inappropriate assistance in academic work, thus affirming your own personal commitment to honor and integrity.

Students with Disabilities Statement

Any student who feels s/he may need an accommodation based on the impact of a disability should contact me privately to discuss your specific needs.Please contact the Office of Disability Services at 865-974-6087 if you have specific questions about disability services.

Attendance

You are expected to attend all class meetings.

Late Work

Assignments are due when noted in the tentative schedule.

Class Participation

You are expected to be present, prepared, and participating.

Class Assignments

Assignment 1: Paper

In a coherent, cohesive paper, please respond to the following questions (by question). A minimum of one typed (Times New Roman, 12) double spaced page/question is required.

#1 What do you believe about human nature?

#2 Why do you believe what you wrote about in #1? What factors have influenced your beliefs?

#3 How do these beliefs inform or influence your counseling behavior?

#4 What is the nature of emotional disturbance?

#5Describe the role of environment in your belief system.

#6. How does your belief system address the multicultural dimension?

Due February 9

Assignment 2: Reactions

We will have a number of experts talk with us about advanced counseling theories/strategies and we will have one field trip. For 5 of these, you will submit a typed response to the following question:

How does what I learned today “fit’ (or not fit as the case may be) with my belief system?

Due the next class meeting

Assignment 3: Major Project

Your major 660 project represents the intersection of teaching and research. You will be randomly assigned a counseling theory or strategy that you will teach your classmates. Specifically, you will design, write, and deliver a 1 ½ hour instructional unit to your classmates.

Part I : Written (50% of project grade)

  • Write unit goals and objectives
  • Prepare in written format the content of unit
  • Describe teaching strategies
  • Integrate research on the effectiveness (or ineffectiveness) of your theory or strategy
  • Devise an evaluation plan that is linked to your goals and objectives
  • References

Part II: Presentation (50% of project grade)

  • Introduce unit
  • Engage students
  • Present content
  • Demonstrate applicability of theory or strategy
  • Evaluate learning

Assignment 4: Reflection

Evaluation

AssignmentPossible PointsDue Date

Paper15February 9

Reactions20Class meetings following speakers

Project50Assigned class meetings

Final integrative Paper15April 27

Grading

90– 100A78 – 79C+

88 – 90B+70-77C

80 – 87BBelow 70F

Tentative Class Schedule

January 19Introduction to 660

Theoretical approaches to a problem

January 26A Review of TheoriesCase study Presentations

February 2Art Therapy

Dr. Stephanie Cramer

Meet in BEC 119

February 9Human Nature, Helping, and YouBankart: History

Conte, Ch 1

Patterson, Introduction, Ch 21

February 16Behaviorism

Dr Joel Diambra

February 17Oedipus the King

Carousel Theatre

February 23Narrative Therapy

Dr. Jeannine Studer

March 2Equine Assisted Psychotherapy (information) Kim Henry, Mane Support 8:30—10:30 Thesis How Equine Assisted Psychotherapy Works

March 9Spring Break

March 16 Jungian AnalysisBankart, Ch 9

Dr. Doug Tyler

March 23HypnosisNash article

Dr. Michael Nash

March 30

April 6

April 13

April 20Somatic Experiencing: Trauma, Healing,

Recovery

Dr. Damaris Olsen

April 27 Reflection due