COUN 512 Systemic Theory: Marriage, Couple and Family Counseling *
This graduate-level course introduces systemic thinking and a variety of Family Therapy theories and interventions. The course has two overarching objectives. First, students develop self-awareness into their own family-of-origin. Second, students explore the history of Family Therapy (Bowen, Strategic, Structural), the Feminist Critique, Post-Modern Theories, Neurobiological Research, and key family/social dynamics of the Twenty-First Century. Methods of instruction primarily feature in-class face-to-face learning, with some additional asynchronous online work.
Prerequisite
Admission to the MAC program.
Outcomes
- This course will prepare students to:
- a) Interpret family dynamics within their own family-of-origin, and evaluate the impact of those dynamics on their current functioning.
- b) Evaluate and summarize findings from commonly used assessment tools in family systems theory.
- c) Appraise the history and development of marriage, couple, and family counseling.
- d) Apply family systems theory to client presenting problems and diagnoses.