Intervention in Family Systems
| Keywords |
| Classification |
Keyword |
| OFICIAL |
Psychology |
Instance: 2012/2013 - 1S
Cycles of Study/Courses
Teaching language
Portuguese
Objectives
1. Place, historically, psychological family therapy;
2. Discuss different issues related to the dialectical development processes of family structure as a whole;
3. Analyze the relationships in the family structure in both developmental and dialectic perspectives;
4. Knowledge different models of family therapy, recognizing its specificities as a theory and as an intervention;
5. Know techniques and intervention strategies;
6. Analyze clinical cases with different problems in a systemic developmental perspective;
7. Hypothesize, plan and internationalize strategies and techniques appropriated to the specific problems and possible changes of the different familiar subsystems: individual, couple, parental and family, inside the psychotherapy process
8. Have an attitude of openness, flexibility and ethics;
9. Realize the difficulties and specificities of research in Family systems.
Program
o The emergence of a new discipline and its historical framework in the scientific community context;
o Family Psychological Development;
o The development as a dialectical process in the interaction of biological, psychological and contextual (proximal and distal) factors.
o Constructivist and Attachment theories ;
o Paradigms, models and intervention techniques of Family Psychological Intervention;
o Systemic models in the service of psychological intervention in different contexts (e.g. schools);
o Psychotherapy and parental development;
o Promotion of positive parenting and parent-child relationships throughout life;
o Pregnancy, infertility, perinatal death and abortion;
o Single-parent families;
o Divorce: characterization contextualization and Explanatory Models ;
o Psychological Intervention on divorce;
o Remarried Families: characteristics, consequences, psychological
Mandatory literature
Dallos,R & Vetere,A.; Attachment narrative Therapy: Integrating, sYstemic and attachment therapies., Routledge, 2009
Jonson, S.M.; Attachment processes in couple and family therapy, Erdman, 2003
Mark Rivett & EddY Street ; Family Therapy.100Key points & techniques , N.Y: Routledge, 2009
Thomas W. Roberts ; A Systems Perspective of Parenting, Brooks/ Cole Publishing Company., 2008
Juffer, F.; Bakermans- Kranenburg,M. J. e IJzendoom, M.H.; Promoting Positive Parenting. An Attachment- based intervention., 2008
Burns, L.H. and Covington, S.N. (eds) ; Infertility Counseling: A Comprehensive Handbook for Clinicians, Parthenon, New York, 2009
P.M. Matos,C. Duarte, M.E.Costa ; Familias questões de desenvolvimento e intervenção, Porto: Livpsic, 2011
Teaching methods and learning activities
This CU is organized in theoretical (2h) complemented by practice classes (1.5h) in a weekly basis. As this CU aims to provide a basic structure of training for students’ future exercise of clinical psychologists, becoming essential that information is transmitted both in scientific but plain language, encouraging learning, reflection and communication. Predominantly, oral presentations with audio visual support materials are used. However, students’ continuous participation is encouraged through their own presentation of examples, dilemmas and issues. Each student has an observer role in a clinical case in the Faculty Community services, reporting each session, planning the following session and presents the case to the class. In practical classes students watch videos of psychological intervention in different models and different issues. Evaluation is continuous a comprehensive with a final exam, worth 50% each.
Evaluation Type
Distributed evaluation with final exam
Assessment Components
| Description |
Type |
Time (hours) |
Weight (%) |
End date |
| Attendance (estimated) |
Participação presencial |
45,50 |
|
|
|
Total: |
- |
0,00 |
|
Eligibility for exams
Evaluation is continuous with a final exam, worth 50% each