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Training in Family and Systemic Approaches

The Trust offers a range of courses in systemic practice and systemic family psychotherapy.


Who can apply for systemic courses?

Professionals in child and adult mental health, voluntary, education, social care, counselling and other settings. Courses are multidisciplinary.

 
Our courses help participants to

  • Develop therapeutic skills, communicate clearly, think creatively and work reflectively and sensitively under pressure using systemic practice and theory in:
    • family work
    • adult and child individual work
    • couple work
  • Enable individuals and families to generate helpful perspectives, changing relationships and the ways their experience is understood.
  • Be resilient, capable practitioners equipped to work effectively with complex problems.
  • Attend to context and intervene in systems in which individuals/ families live.
  • Think self-reflexively (think about oneself in the work) and enhance resilience.
  • Work effectively in multidisciplinary professional teams and multi-agency networks

D4 Postgraduate Certificate/Diploma in Applied Systemic Theory

D76 Systemic Live Supervision 

M6 Masters in Systemic Psychotherapy

M10 Professional Doctorate in Systemic Psychotherapy

M21 Family Therapy Supervision


Specialist professional development courses include:

  • Working with families with physical illness, with parental mental illness, & refugee families
  • Supervision and management
  • Tailor-made short courses in family and systemic approaches to meet the needs of teams and organisations

 
D15C Systemic Supervision Workshops for Primary Care

D19 Working With Families With Physical Illness: A Systemic Approach

D35 Working with Refugee Families

M35 MA in Refugee Care

D23P Managing Psychology Services: A Systemic Perspective

D23S Managing in Multidisciplinary and Multi-agency Environments: A Systemic Perspective

Short Course on Developing Skills in Collaborative Work with Parental Mental Illness

Working with Families Where There is a Parental Mental Illness




Last Updated: 18/08/2008