| Code: | PJD05 | Acronym: | IA |
| Keywords | |
|---|---|
| Classification | Keyword |
| CNAEF | Psychology |
| Active? | Yes |
| Responsible unit: | Psychology |
| Course/CS Responsible: | Master Degree in Psychology |
| Acronym | No. of Students | Study Plan | Curricular Years | Credits UCN | Credits ECTS | Contact hours | Total Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MPSI | 33 | Plano de Estudos 2021 | 1 | - | 6 | 54 | 162 |
The main objectives of this course are to promote a deep understanding of the main causes, dynamics, processes and consequences of aggression and violence (physical, psychological, sexual, etc.), as well as the main explanatory theories and intervention models based on them.
To promote the mastery of some knowledge in related areas (e.g. Law, Criminology, Forensic Medicine).
To present the main models for assessing and managing the risk of violence and/or recidivism; the main models, programmes and strategies for psychological, psychosocial and psycho-educational intervention with aggressors/offenders; the need for network intervention in this area, as well as reinforcing understanding of the interrelationships between intervention with victims and intervention with aggressors and the relationships between prevention, intervention, different models of justice, punishment and reintegration.
At the end of the UC students should:
1. Identify and master the main explanatory theories and intervention models that allow us to understand the phenomena of aggression and violence; understand their causes, processes and dynamics; in short, to have the theoretical knowledge necessary to support the development of appropriate assessment and intervention skills with offenders / aggressors (young people and adults), psycho-educational, psychosocial intervention and psychological intervention / psychotherapy.
2. Possess basic skills to:
a) assess and intervene with perpetrators in various professional contexts (e.g. prison services, juvenile justice system, psychological counselling services, police institutions, the judicial system, community projects), as well as skills for integration into multidisciplinary teams.
b) assess and intervene in different situations of violence/crime, whether in emergency intervention / risk / danger assessment and response, crisis intervention or ongoing psychological intervention / psychoeducational programmes / therapy (individual or group).
c) write psychological reports and to intervene in legal proceedings involving offenders / aggressors (including testify in courts).
d) liaise, whenever necessary, with the professionals who are accompanying their victims.
- Violence, aggression, and victimization. Main psychological, psychosocial and criminological theories explaining violence and aggression.
- Types of violence, crime and victimization; contexts and forms of victimization.
- Gender violence. Intimate partner violence, domestic violence, marital violence, family violence.
- Child maltreatment (e.g., negligence, physical and psychological maltreatment, sexual abuse).
- Sexual crimes, particularly rape and child sexual abuse. Child sexual abuse vs paedophilia.
- Assessment and psychological (or psychoeducational / psychosocial) intervention models and strategies with perpetrators of violence and crime (youth and adults) – national and international perspectives.
- Specificities of the intervention with perpetrators of domestic/intimate relationship violence and with perpetrators of sexual violence.
- Specificities of the intervention with young people who have committed offences / violent acts, namely serious physical offences and sexual offences
- Different models of judicial and psycho-judicial intervention; Punishment, psychotherapy and social rehabilitation.
- Theoretical classes.
- Theoretical-practical classes with active participation of students, individually and in groups.
- Classes with guests, who will share with the students their experiences of intervention with aggressors / perpetrators / offenders.
- Practical case-studies.
- Analysis of videos (and other materials) with contents related to violence / aggression and to the intervention with perpetrators.
- Whenever possible, observation of consultations conducted at GEAV, one of the Counselling / Therapy Units of the FPCEUP.
- Tutorial supervision of students works.
- Development of a practical assignment by the students, in small groups, which involves the description of a perpetrator / offender’s case and the characterization and application of an evaluation and intervention proposal for that case. This type of work requires analysis of theoretical contents and, above all, critical reflection on knowledge and practices, in addition to an exercise of practical application of the knowledge and skills acquired.
| designation | Weight (%) |
|---|---|
| Trabalho escrito | 30,00 |
| Trabalho prático ou de projeto | 30,00 |
| Apresentação/discussão de um trabalho científico | 20,00 |
| Trabalho de campo | 20,00 |
| Total: | 100,00 |
| designation | Time (hours) |
|---|---|
| Estudo autónomo | 36,00 |
| Frequência das aulas | 46,00 |
| Trabalho de campo | 40,00 |
| Trabalho escrito | 30,00 |
| Apresentação/discussão de um trabalho científico | 10,00 |
| Total: | 162,00 |
- Students’ attendance in each class will be monitored. Students must attend 75% of the total number of classes taught. In exceptional cases, legally foreseen, the traditional class attendance may be substituted by the submission of a research assignment.
- In accordance with the regulation of evaluation, students must have a minimum grade of 10 points to obtain final approval (none of the assessment components can sum less than 8 points). The failure to achieve the minimum score of 10 points implies non approval in the discipline and the obligation to repeat the evaluation.
Final grade expressed on a scale of 0 to 20.
A. 70% of the final grade in the UC results from the evaluation of the practical assignment carried out by the students, in small groups: an assignment in which students have to plan and describe an intervention with a perpetrator / offender or group of offenders (including the case design, the offender / aggressor assessment and intervention steps and strategies). This work is developed during the semester and will be presented as a role-playing of the intervention at the end of the classes- It is complemented with a brief written synopsis of the case.
[This assignment includes the following evaluation components: "Presentation / discussion of a scientific work" (20%); "Field work" (20%), and “Practical or project work” (30%)].
B. 30% of the final grade in the UC results from 2 small written work, carried out individually - the student will have to (i) fill in 2 “brief evaluation sheets” (one in the middle of the semester and the other at the end of the semester); or (ii) to present a written assignment, at the end of the semester, describing one of the strategies, modalities or intervention programs for aggressors/offenders, and presenting their theoretical frame.
[This assignment includes the evaluation component of "Written work" (30%)]
In the legally provided situations, in which students cannot carry out the same assessment assignments that their colleagues will present, the student must negotiate with the responsible teacher the delivery of an alternative work, with the same objectives and an equivalent content.
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 and the theoretical components.
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.