Counseling Psychology & Special Education 715

Diagnosis and Treatment of Dysfunctional Behavior

Fall 2005Tues 12:00-2:30 341MCKB

422-3599 email:

The teaching assistant for this class is Suzanne Plowman. She can be reached at 492-9122 (Home) or 836-8215 (Cell). Her email is: . She will be responsible for quizzes.

This course is an introduction to theories of psychopathology and diagnosis according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders - Fourth Edition (DSM-IV-TR). It focuses on three main areas. 1) Understanding the Scientific rationale for diagnosis and diagnostic categories; 2) Learning diagnostic criteria for major diagnostic categories and specific disorders. Theories of etiology for specific disorders are introduced; 3) Reading and discussion of treatment strategies as presented in current professional literature; 4) Understanding how diversity and culture impactprevalence, symptoms, and outcome in diagnostic categories.

Texts:

APA, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders - IV; TR 2000.

Sperry, LD.; DSM-IV-TR Personality Disorders, 2nd Edition, 2003.

Barlow, D.H.; Clinical Handbook of Psychological Disorders, 2001, 3rd Edition.

Burland, J. What Helps, What Hurts, NAMI.

Exams:

There will be 10 unit quizzes, given through the Backboard system. These will be available on Blackboard following the corresponding class discussion. They will be available for one week and then it will no longer be posted. The system is timed so please read your text thoroughly before beginning the quiz. They will vary in points from 10-25 points. Please read assigned material before coming to class so the lecture will be more meaningful. Quizzes cannot be made up. If you anticipate a problem please talk with me ahead of time. There will also be a midterm and a final exam. These will be administered in class. They will cover reading material, handouts, and material presented in class. Both exams will include multiple choice, short answer, true-false, and essays. They will also include case studies. The midterm is worth 100 points and the final is worth 200 points.

Research Paper

One research paper, not longer than 20 pages, is required that reviews the current literature on a specific mental disorder or cluster of related disorders as approved by the instructor. This paper should briefly review the diagnostic features of the disorder(s) and examine etiology and treatment in depth. The paper should be in APA style. The paper is worth 100 points.

Extra Credit:

Up to 10 points extra credit may be earned by either reading a book from “pop” literature on a disorder or treatment issue or reviewing a “pop” movie that focuses on a disorder or treatment issue. Examples include: [Books] Mood Swing (Ronald R. Fieve), Making Peace with Food (Susan Kano), Feeling Good (David Burns), [Movies] Benny and June, Shine, Awakenings, Unstrung Heroes. Write a 1-2 page critique that discusses whether the disorder and treatment are accurately portrayed and represented, how the portrayal may impact public attitudes about mental illness, and why or why not it may be useful to clients. You can do up to 2 of these for a maximum of 5 points each.

Grades

Grading will be on a modified curve. You must earn 75% of possible points to receive a grade of B-.

Honor Code Standards

In keeping with the principles of the BYU Honor Code, students are expected to be honest in all of their academic work. Academic honesty means, most fundamentally, that any work you present as your own must in fact be your own work and not that of another. Violations of this principle may result in a failing grade in the course and additional disciplinary action by the university.

Students are also expected to adhere to the Dress and Grooming Standards. Adherence demonstrates respect for yourself and others and ensures an effective learning and working environment. It is the university’s expectation, and my own expectation in class, that each student will abide by all Honor Code standards. Please call the Honor Code Office at 422-2847 if you have questions about those standards.

Preventing Sexual Harassment:

Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 prohibits sex discrimination against any participant in an education program or activity that receives federal funds. The act is intended to eliminate sex discrimination in education. Title IX covers discrimination in programs, admissions, activities, and student-to-student sexual harassment. BYU’s policy against sexual harassment extends not only to employees of the university but to students as well. If you encounter unlawful sexual harassment or gender based discrimination, please talk to your professor; contact the Equal Employment Office at 378-5895 or 367-5689 (24 hours); or contact the Honor Code Office at 378-2847.

Students with Disabilities:

BrighamYoungUniversity is committed to providing a working and learning atmosphere which reasonably accommodates qualified persons with disabilities. If you have any disability which may impair your ability to complete this course successfully, please contact the Services for Students with Disabilities Office (378-2767). Reasonable academic accommodations are reviewed for all students who have qualified documented disabilities. Services are coordinated with the student and instructor by the SSD office. If you need assistance or if you feel you have been unlawfully discriminated against on the basis of disability, you may seek resolution through established grievance policy and procedures. You should contact the Equal Employment Office at 378-5895, D-292 ASB.

Schedule:

Date / Topic / Reading / Quiz begins for that unit
Aug. 30 / Introduction to Course
Theories of Diagnosis
Mental status exam / DSM xxi-xxxvii
Sept.6 / Multi-Axial Assessment
Infancy, Childhood, and Adolescence / DSM 1-38
DSM 39-134 / Quiz 1
.13 / Cognitive Disorders
Library Research (1-2:30) / DSM 135-180 / Quiz 2
20 / Guest- Treatment of substance abuse, Medical and
Substance-Related disorders / DSM 181-296
Barlow Ch. 9-10 / Quiz 3
27 / Schizophrenia
Other Psychotic disorders / DSM 297-344
“What Helps-What Hurts” / Quiz 4
Oct. 4 / Mood Disorders / DSM 345-428;
Barlow Ch. 6, 7, 12 / Quiz 5
11 / Suicide, Midterm
18 / Anxiety / DSM 429-484 / Quiz 6
25 / Guest Speaker – Behavior Medicine, PTSD / Barlow 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
Nov. 1 / Somatoform, Factitious, Dissociative / DSM 485-534 / Quiz 7
8 / Sexual and Gender, Eating / DSM 535-596
Barlow 8, 13 / Quiz 8
15 / Sleep, Impulse, Adjustment and V-codes / DSM 597-684, 731-743
Barlow 14 / Quiz 9
21 / Friday Classes
29 / Personality Disorders – Guest Speaker (1:00-2::00) / DSM 685-730, Barlow 14, Sperry 1-36, group handouts on specific disorders / Quiz 10
Dec. 6 / Review
16 / Final – Friday 3:00 PM -6:00 PM

Final:Friday Dec. 16 – 3:00 PM -6:00 PM