This unit will assist students to build skills, knowledge and attitudes in research methods in psychotherapy, mental health and trauma-informed care. This learning will provide a foundation for appraisal and design of psychosocial research and further scholarship in the area. The student will gain an understanding of a range of research approaches including the case study, qualitative and quantitative methods, mixed methods approaches, linguistic and dyadic research and the applications of these methods to epidemiological, process and outcome research. The student will also develop and demonstrate critical thinking that considers philosophical approaches, analytic investigation and reflective practice in psychotherapy. The student will be able to describe the research cycle and its use in developing a research project. The student will apply the concepts to critical appraisal of journal articles and synthesise learning by proposing a research project. This unit provides the initial foundation for the treatise that students need to complete as part of their training in the Conversational Model of Psychotherapy. It will assist students from a wide range of disciplines who wish to conduct research on psychotherapy, mental health and trauma-informed care. Please note students will not be required to undertake a research project as part of this unit of study.
Unit details and rules
Academic unit | Brain and Mind Science |
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Credit points | 6 |
Prerequisites
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None |
Corequisites
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None |
Prohibitions
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None |
Assumed knowledge
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This unit assumes a working clinical knowledge of basic counselling and mental health, commensurate with a clinician having worked 2 or more years in a setting with general health counselling or mental health clients. |
Available to study abroad and exchange students | No |
Teaching staff
Coordinator | Lea Crisante, lea.crisante@sydney.edu.au |
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