Go to Main Content

Purdue Self-Service

 

HELP | EXIT

Catalog Entries

 

Summer 2013
May 20, 2024
Transparent Image
Information Select the Course Number to get further detail on the course. Select the desired Schedule Type to find available classes for the course. The Schedule Type links will be available only when the schedule of classes is available for the selected term.

EDPS 62400 - Advanced Off-Site Counseling Practicum And Supervision Theory
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised use of personal and/or career counseling and assessment applied to complex and difficult client situations. Critical analysis of counseling supervision theories. Prerequisite: EDPS 61400. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours

Syllabus Available
Levels: Undergraduate, Graduate, Professional
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
All Sections for this Course

Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies


May be offered at any of the following campuses:     
      West Lafayette

Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 15 credits

Learning Outcomes: 1. Develop knowledge of counseling supervision theories, methods and problems. 2. Learn to think like a supervisor, using the scientist-practitioner integration of theory, research and practice. 3. Understand individual and cultural differences and diversity (ICD) in supervision. 4. Achieve a counseling supervision foundation that is consistent with the scientist-practitioner model, your counseling theoretical approach and your identity as a counseling psychologist. 5. Gain knowledge, awareness and understanding of ethical issues related to counseling supervision. 6. Develop increased skill in understanding clients' issues within and across sessions, identifying patterns, and conceptualizing with professional theories; for instance, better recognize and understand the therapy process (e.g., the pace of working through, phases of therapy). 7. Achieve greater self-awareness in professional relationships. Recognize, understand and respond constructively to personal reactions in counseling and supervision (i.e., individual, group, peer). 8. Attain increased ability to translate theory into the practice of psychology, use the self-in-relationship as an intervention, monitor counseling relationship and process, and effectively develop and apply interventions from a theoretical conceptualization. 9. Gain competence and confidence in self as a counseling psychologist and scientist-practitioner (i.e., a critical thinker who applies a scientific attitude to integrating theory, research, and practice). 10. Accomplish greater understanding and responsiveness to cultural and individual differences and diversity in clients' personality functioning and in professional relationships. 11. Become more skillful in using appropriate self-reflection and providing feedback to other (e.g., clients, peers) in a non-critical and useful manner. 12. Demonstrate the ability to implement and behave in accordance with professional guidelines, standards, ethics, and law applicable to the practice of psychology. 13. Demonstrate effective use of both individual and group supervision, using group leadership skills. 14. Achieve a collegial, collaborative and consultative attitude toward learning, supervision, practice, conceptualization, and diagnosis. 15. Enhance thoughtful and useful self-reflection and self-evaluation. 16. Gain a reasonable sense of your own strengths and growing edges as a therapist and supervisee. Be prepared to convey these strengths and growing edges to new supervisors. 17. Demonstrate the ability to be responsible for your own learning, including focusing on and participating in the class' learning.


Return to Previous New Search XML Extract
Transparent Image
Skip to top of page
Release: 8.7.2.4