| Code: | P812 | Acronym: | IV |
| Keywords | |
|---|---|
| Classification | Keyword |
| OFICIAL | Psychology |
| Active? | Yes |
| Responsible unit: | Psychology |
| Course/CS Responsible: | Integrated Master Psychology |
| Acronym | No. of Students | Study Plan | Curricular Years | Credits UCN | Credits ECTS | Contact hours | Total Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MIPSI | 37 | Official Curricular Structure | 4 | - | 6 | 54 | 162 |
| Official Curricular Structure 2012 | 4 | - | 6 | 54 | 162 |
At the end of the semester students should:
- Know the most important theories, causes, dynamics and consequences of violence and victimization that enable students to understand, assess and intervene with victims (children, youth and adults).
- Understand the specific dynamics of family violence.
- Acquire some knowledge in related domains (e.g., Law, Legal Medicine).
- Acquire the basic knowledge and strategies necessary for the psychological and psychosocial intervention process with victims of violence/crime.
- Understand the relationships and interactions between intervention with victims and intervention with offenders.
At the end of the semester students should:
- Know the most important theories and intervention models, in order to develop the basic competencies to understand this problem and assess and intervene with victims (children, youth and adults).
- Acquired basic intervention skills to operate in various professional contexts, such as victim support organizations, hospitals, health centers, psychological counseling services, police institutions or community projects, justice system, as well as to be able to acquire skills to work in multidisciplinary teams.
- Develop the basic knowledges/competencies to assess and intervene with victims (children, youth and adults) either in emergency / risk / danger situations and crisis intervention or in psychotherapy.
- Develop the skills necessary to elaborate forensic psychological reports and testify in court.
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- Introduction to Criminology and Victimology; presentation of the main concepts develop along the program;
- Main psychological, psychosocial and criminological theories explaining violence and victimization.
- Victimization: criminal statistics, victimization surveys, victim profiles.
- Types of violence, crime and victimization; contexts and forms of victimization. - Dynamics and impact of violence: the specificity of family violence (e.g., domestic violence, marital violence, violence against children), child maltreatment (e.g., negligence, physical and psychological maltreatment, sexual abuse), and sexual crimes against adults.
-Assessment methods and psychological and psychosocial intervention with victims of violence and crime (children and adults; individual, couple and group interventions; different strategies, models and programs).
- Victim’s support network.
- Colective violence and vitimization: from individual to colective violence - a critical exercize over the psychological reductionism; estrutural, institutional and quotidian violences; social iniqualitym, social injustice and social exclusion as means of violence and vitimization; Groups and populations most vulnerable to those types of violence; State violence and Peace Psychology.
- Theoretical classes.
- Theoretical-practical classes with active participation of students, individually and in groups.
- Practical Case-studies.
- Viewing and discussion of videos with topics related to violence/victimization and to the intervention with victims.
- Elaboration and discussion of an assignment carried out by the students that involves the preparation and role-play of a psychological intervention with a victim (including assessment and intervention strategies). This project requires bibliographic analysis and critical reflection on knowledge and practices.
- Tutorial supervision of theoretical and practical assignments carried out by students, as well as providing the necessary conditions to develop independent study/work, including research and literature search, in order to facilitate the assimilation of contents.
| designation | Weight (%) |
|---|---|
| Exame | 80,00 |
| Trabalho de campo | 20,00 |
| Total: | 100,00 |
| designation | Time (hours) |
|---|---|
| Estudo autónomo | 40,00 |
| Frequência das aulas | 52,00 |
| Trabalho de campo | 30,00 |
| Total: | 122,00 |
-In accordance with the regulation of evaluation (cf. art. 9), students must have a minimum grade of 8 points in the practical work, as well as on the final written exam. The failure to achieve the minimum score of 8 points implies non approval in the discipline and the obligation to repeat the evaluation. In the case of non-submission of the practical work by the deadline established at the beginning of the semester, the student will not be admitted to the final exam and, therefore, cannot obtain final approval in the discipline.
Final grade based on a 0-20 scale:
- 80% of the grade is based on the final exam classification.
- 20% of the grade is based on the practical assignment carried out by the students throughout the semester and presented in classes.
In exceptional cases, foreseen in the regulations or in cases duly justified and accepted as valid by the School’s competent committees, students may be evaluated outside the usual context and regular calendar, through the completion of a written project with a content similar to what other students have done to assess the practical component (weighing 50% in the final grade) and an oral or written test on the contents of the discipline (weighing 50% in the final grade).
In these cases, the student should contact the teacher responsible for the discipline at the beginning of the semester to define the rules and methodologies of the alternative evaluation.
There is a possibility of repeating the final written examination (and only the final written examination) in the proceeding exam period.