Freud did us a great disservice when he equated religion to a neurosis. In fact, ≥85% of the world’s population has a faith position. Recent evidence also suggests that spiritual/religious interventions may be more effective than traditional psychological interventions! Therefore, counsellors should not ignore matters of faith, religion and/or spirituality. Even so, counsellors must be aware of how psycho-spiritual practices have been abused, or may be harmful to some clients. It is hoped that by the end of this unit students will be able to integrate basic psycho-spiritual and religious interventions into their professional work in a safe and efficacious way.
Unit code: CO3009Z
Unit status: Approved (New unit)
Points: 18.0
Unit level: Undergraduate Level 3
Unit discipline: Counselling
Delivery Mode: Blended
Proposing College: School of Professional Practice - Counselling
Show when this unit is running1. | Articulate their own position on the role of religion, faith, and spirituality in counselling. |
2. | Name, describe, and implement various basic evidence-based spiritual/religious interventions appropriate to counselling. |
3. | Articulate professional, ethical, and legal boundaries on the use of spiritual/religious interventions in counselling. |
4. | Describe how they may integrate spiritual/religious interventions in their practice of counselling. |
Offering: This unit is to be taught in year 3, semester 2 (term 4).
Prerequisites: CO1004Z The Human Condition CO1005Z Introduction to Counselling CO1007Z Introduction to Psychology CO2001Z Human Development, Personality, And Identity CO2006Z What Is Abnormal?: The Individual, Diagnostics, And Society CO2007Z Counselling Ethics, The Law, And Best Practice CO2008Z Self-Care And The Workplace
Prohibited combinations: CO3010Z The Well Community
Scaffolded learning In practice: This is a collaborative way of learning that takes note of the learner’s zone of proximal development (ZPD). By repeatedly extending the learner’s ZPD they develop a comprehensive and integrated system of knowledge/skills. Scaffolded learning is achieved through the provision of online modules which clearly guide a student’s learning; through activities of increased complexity during intensives; by face-to-face seminars which are tailored to induce academic/professional growth in an ordered and coherent way; and by assessments which not only seek to identify that key knowledge/skills have been learnt, but that the student is developing an integrated understanding of counselling.
Type | Description | Word count | Weight (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Skeleton Argument | For 5 different module “Activities” across the unit provide either: (1) a response of approx. 100 words to the question posed; or (2) a response of approx. 100 words to another student’s post. Each response will be marked as satisfactory or unsatisfactory. |
500 | 5.0 |
Personal Reflection | For 5 different module “Reflection questions” across the unit provide either: (1) a response of approx. 100 words to the question posed; or (2) a response of approx. 100 words to another student’s post. Each response will be marked as satisfactory or unsatisfactory. |
500 | 5.0 |
Essay | State your personal faith position. How might this influence your counselling? |
1000 | 25.0 |
Case Study | Spiritual/religious interventions are powerful. At best, they help a person tap previously inaccessible resources to promote a sense of wellbeing and resilience. At worst, they become “techniques of persuasion” or initiate an unhealthy “psycho-drama”. Go and observe a religious service. Were there psycho-spiritual interventions, techniques of persuasion, or psycho-dramas present? What psycho-social factors may permit a shift from a healthy use of spiritual/religious interventions to an unhealthy use? |
1000 | 25.0 |
Essay | How might you responsibly integrate various spiritual/religious practices into your work as a counsellor? In answering this question consider your marketing, the client contract, (i.e., informed consent), your faith position, any ministry training you may have had, and how such interventions should be written up in the client's notes. Now list a number of spiritual/religious interventions you would be comfortable using. Describe the quality of evidence supporting each, who would benefit from each intervention, who each intervention is contra-indicated for, how you would implement the intervention, and what success metrics would be appropriate. |
2000 | 40.0 |
Unit approved for the University of Divinity by Prof Albert Haddad on 7 Nov, 2024
Unit record last updated: 2024-11-07 14:49:32 +1100