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Program Coordinator:
T. Ken Ishida
Program Office:
Dorothy Donahoe Hall, D123
Telephone:
(661) 654-2375
email:
kishida@csub.edu
Website:
http://www.csub.edu/cpsy
Assistant Program
Coordinator:
Kathleen Y. Ritter
Program Office:
Education 222
Telephone:
(661) 654-3062
email:
kritter@csub.edu
Faculty:
S.F. Bacon, T.K. Ishida, E.J. Martinez,
B.M. Rienzi, K.Y.
Ritter
Program Description
The 90-quarter
unit Master of Science in Counseling Psychology Program at
CSUB trains students to meet the community need for ethical,
competent, and adaptable mental health professionals. It is
designed to meet the academic requirements established by
the Board of Behavioral Sciences (BBS), Sections 4980.37,
4980.38, 4980.40, and 4980.41 (subdivisions a-g) of the
Business and Professions Code, for the California License in
Marriage and Family Therapy (LMFT). Students receive broad
training that prepares them for work in diverse and changing
settings. The well-trained counselor will understand that:
1. Counseling
involves the application of intervention techniques based on
the best theory and empirical research available;
2. The
counseling relationship is central to effective therapeutic
intervention;
3. Counselors
creatively use their knowledge, skills, and personal
experiences to create an environment where clients can make
positive change;
4. Clients’
adaptive and maladaptive functioning is determined by
multiple factors including individual, familial and cultural
influences; and
5. Training and
education in counseling is a lifelong process that begins in
graduate school and continues throughout the counselor’s
professional career.
The curricular
objectives of the Master of Science in Counseling Psychology
therefore emphasize:
1. A foundation
in the theory and research upon which clinical practice is
based;
2. Development
of self-awareness and relationship-building skills that
contribute to strong therapeutic alliances with clients;
3. Experiential
learning, through which students learn and practice relevant
skills and come to trust their own internal experiencing in
work with clients;
4. An
understanding of and a sensitivity to the effects of diverse
individual, familial, and cultural factors; and,
5. Development
of skills needed for lifelong learning and continued
professional growth.
Experiential
Learning Requirements
The Master of
Science in Counseling Psychology Program is sequentially
arranged and includes an emphasis on principles of
experiential learning. Students are expected to participate
from both counselor and client perspectives in individual,
dyadic, and group exercises. Enrollment in the program
implies student consent to engage in individual and group
experiential learning activities in various courses.
Inter-School
Courses/Curriculum
Because the MS in
Counseling Psychology Program is an inter-school program,
several courses with restricted enrollments are available to
qualified students in the School of Education’s MS in
Counseling program. Enrollment in these courses must be
approved by the CPSY and EDCS Coordinators.
For some
continuing students, discontinued courses may still meet
prerequisite requirements.
CPSY 651, CPSY
661, CPSY 671, CPSY 681, and CPSY 682 are clinical process
classes. These are experiential in nature and require the
use of live clients and videotaping of sessions. Because of
the additional time needed for supervision, and to move
people from room to room and to change videotapes, the class
schedule may indicate more time than mandated for clinical
process classes.
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Admission AND
APPLICATION
Students are
normally admitted for enrollment each Fall term. Students
may be admitted in other quarters, but course selection will
be limited and sequencing will be affected. For application
assistance or questions regarding the acceptability of
prerequisite courses, please contact the Coordinator, T. Ken
Ishida (see above).
Application
The Master of
Science in Counseling Psychology Faculty Committee (CPFC)
reserves the right to admit those applicants they deem most
qualified. Although the university admits international
students using standardized criteria for English language
competence, the CPFC reserves the right to evaluate students
for program admission for oral English mastery needed for
effective communication. Students seeking admission to the
Master of Science in Counseling Psychology may secure
program application materials from the Psychology
Department, c/o Ms. Barbara Espinosa (DDH-D107,
661-654-2363). All program-specific application materials
must be submitted as a complete package. Quarterly
deadlines are listed on information sheets accompanying
application forms; deadlines are also listed on the CSUB
Counseling Psychology Program Home Page: www.csub.edu/cpsy.
Eligibility
Requirements
To be eligible
for admission, the student must fulfill the following
minimum requirements:
1. A bachelor’s
degree from an accredited college or university
2. A 3.0 GPA
over the most recent 60 semester or 90 quarter units
3. Completion
of all prerequisite courses with a grade of at least a “C”
(2.0):
a.
Introductory statistics
b.
Abnormal psychology
c. Child
psychology, developmental psychology, or human development
Prerequisite
courses must have been completed within five (5) calendar
years of intended admission date. A competency examination
may be taken to demonstrate currency of knowledge if
prerequisites were taken outside the time limit.
4. Graduate or
Postbaccalaureate admission to the University. Apply
directly to the University’s Office of Admissions and
Records.
5. Completing
the application packet to the MS in Counseling Psychology
Program including official transcripts, a personal statement
and three letters of recommendation attesting to suitability
and promise.
The CPFC reserves
the option to request supplemental information (e.g.,
personal interview). Students who do not meet minimum
requirements for admission to the program may file a
petition to the CPFC though the Counseling Psychology
Program Coordinator requesting exceptional consideration.
Students denied admission also petition the CPFC for a
second review. The CPFC reserves the right to make all
decisions regarding admission to the Program and all
decisions are considered to be final.
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STUDENT CLASSIFICATIONS
The CPFC
determines students’ initial classification level prior to
admission as well as all subsequent changes in level. At
any point of reclassification the CPFC will evaluate
academic and pre-professional development.
Preprofessional Development
-
Throughout the program students must provide evidence of the
ability to interact competently and ethically with others
from a variety of backgrounds. They must also demonstrate
by conduct and curricular performance achievement of
curricular goals (listed above) appropriate to their
progress in the program. Such evidence also may come from
practicum and technique-based courses, courses with an
experiential focus, or from supervised experiences.
Students will be evaluated at each point of
reclassification.
Classified
- Students who meet all of the requirements for admission
will be admitted at the Classified level. Classified
graduate students may take any graduate level course meeting
the requirements of their Plan of Study as long as the
appropriate prerequisites or corequisites have been met.
Conditionally
Classified
- Students who have completed most, but not all of the
requirements for admission at the Classified level and show
promise of success may be admitted at the Conditionally
Classified level. Students admitted at this level who
complete all admission requirements or alternate
requirements specified in the offer of admission will be
moved to the Classified level, but may take no more than
13.5 units applicable to the MS degree prior to achieving
Classified standing.
Note:
Students accepted by the university as post-baccalaureate
unclassified students may take selected psychology or
counseling psychology courses. The CPFC determines the
acceptability of any graduate transfer credits (maximum of
13.5 quarter units) whether these courses were taken for
personal pleasure or as a means of establishing a record of
academic achievement that could lead to Classified
standing. It is important to note that post-baccalaureate
unclassified students have not been accepted to the
Counseling Psychology program.
Graduate
Candidacy
- Classified level students will be advanced to Graduate
Candidacy after successful completion of CPSY 540, 600, 610,
611, 620, 642, and 643 (CPSY 641 can be substituted for CPSY
642 and 643). Students must have a minimum 3.0 GPA in the
Plan of Study and have completed the Graduation Writing
Assessment Requirement. (See GWAR under “Graduation
Requirements” below.) Students also must have received
positive faculty evaluations in preprofessional development.
The status of Graduate Candidacy is required for the student
to take most of the advanced courses in the Program.
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GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS
To graduate with
the MS degree in Counseling Psychology, a student must meet
the following requirements:
1. Complete the
90-unit program in accordance with the approved Plan of
Study.
2. Be in Good
Standing in the MS in Counseling Psychology program. To be
in Good Standing, a student must maintain at the end of each
term of enrollment a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher in
courses taken to meet degree requirements and receive
satisfactory evaluations of preprofessional development from
faculty and field placement supervisors. Students not in
Good Standing must formally request permission (and receive
written approval) to enroll in additional graduate courses.
The CPFC will review the explanations and plans set forth in
the petition and make a decision whether to permit continued
enrollment and what conditions must be met for a return to
Good Standing.
3. Be advanced
to Graduate Candidacy.
4. Receive an
overall GPA of 3.0 or higher for the entire 90-unit program.
5. Not count
more than two courses, regardless of the number of units,
with grades of “B-” ( 2.7), “C+” (2.3) or “C” (2.0). Any
course with a grade lower than “C” (2.0) will not count
toward the Plan of Study.
6. Not count
any course at the 600 level with a grade of less than “B-”
(2.7).
7. Finally, all
graduate students in the California State University system
must satisfy the Graduation Writing Assessment Requirement (GWAR)
as soon as possible in their program. This can be done
either by passing or having passed the university-wide GWAR
examination or by achieving a grade of “C” (2.0) or better
in COMM 304, ENGL 305, 310, or 311, COMM 306 or 311, HIST
300, or ADM 510. Brochures with more information on the
GWAR are available in the Testing Center, the Department of
English, and in all dean’s offices. The English Department
is the sole determiner of whether writing courses at non-CSU
institutions may be equivalent.
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COURSE DESCRIPTIONS
CPSY 500
Introduction to Counseling Psychology (4)
Overview of the
counseling profession, counseling and consultation processes
and services, counseling theories, and preparation of
counselors, including the development of a professional
identity as an MFT or professional counselor.
CPSY 512
Psychological Testing (4)
Survey of
assessment procedures applicable to MFT practice and their
theoretical and applied characteristics. Consideration of
the role of various kinds of assessment in typical clinical
situations, as well as the impact of cultural orientation,
age, and other client characteristics in ethically selecting
and using assessment procedures. Prerequisite: one course
in elementary statistics. [S]
CPSY 520
Research Methods in Counseling
Psychology (4)
Methods and
issues associated with the conduct and use of research
concerning phenomena relevant to counseling psychology.
Overview of hypothesis generation, research design, data
collection and interpretation, and utilization of research
findings in clinical practice. Prerequisite: one course in
elementary statistics. [W]
CPSY 530 Human
Sexuality (4)
Examination of
the major variables affecting human sexuality. Includes the
physiological, psychological, and sociocultural variables
associated with the development and manifestation of sexual
identity, sexual behavior, and sexual disorders. Special
attention to the etiology, assessment, and treatment of
sexual dysfunctions and to the relationship between issues
of sexuality and intimate interpersonal relationships. [S]
CPSY 535
Domestic Violence (2)
Prevention,
detection, assessment, intervention, and legal reporting of
violence in families, with special emphasis on abuse of
children, dependent adults, and partners in intimate
relationships. Therapeutic considerations include diagnosis,
evaluation, and treatment planning. [F]
CPSY 540
Theories of Individual Counseling (4)
Examination of
several contemporary individual intervention approaches
based on specific behavioral, cognitive,
humanistic/experiential, and psychodynamic frameworks.
Consideration of how each approach is used in clinical,
school, and marriage and family counseling applications.
Prerequisite: Conditionally Classified standing in the MS
in Counseling Psychology and permission of instructor. [F]
CPSY 600 Human
Communication I (4)
Interpersonal
processes fundamental to the development of
psychotherapeutic counseling strategies, with an emphasis on
processes underlying verbal and nonverbal communication and
the use of clinical skills applicable to interviewing,
assessment, and intervention. Practice in simulated
laboratory situations. Offered on a credit, no-credit basis
only. Prerequisite: Classified standing in the MS in
Counseling Psychology. [F]
CPSY 610
Psychopathology and Diagnostic
Interviewing
(4)
Examination of
major types of psychopathology. Techniques of intake
interviewing and determining mental status to formulate a
differential diagnosis based upon the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Prerequisite:
Classified standing in the MS in Counseling Psychology. [F]
CPSY 611
Treatment Planning (2)
Focus on
alternative ways of integrating clinical information in
order to develop practical and effective treatment plans.
Relationships among client factors (e.g., diagnostic,
personality, cultural, and developmental), therapist
factors, and various interventions. Prerequisites: CPSY 600
and CPSY 610. [W]
CPSY 620 Adult
and Family Development (4)
Exploration of
the biological, psychological, and social developmental
tasks and life events of the adult years, including a family
and vocational perspective. Focus on sociocultural, gender,
and family issues salient to relationships, separation,
nontraditional and blended families, and geropsychology.
Prerequisite: Classified standing in the MS in Counseling
Psychology. [W]
CPSY 630
Clinical Ethics (2)
Contemporary
professional ethics relative to counseling practice.
Professional codes of ethics (ACA, AAMFT/CAMFT, and APA) and
examination of key case examples. Prerequisite: Classified
standing in the MS in Counseling Psychology. [S]
CPSY 631 Legal
and Professional Issues in Marriage and Family Therapy (2)
Laws and
regulations that delineate the professional scope of
practice of Marriage and Family Therapy. Current legal
patterns and trends, including those in family law and
reporting requirements imposed on California therapists by
statute, regulation, and case law. Goals and objectives of
professional organizations, standards of training, licensure
and standards, and the rights and responsibilities of the
professional counselor. Prerequisite or corequisite: CPSY
630. [S]
CPSY 633 Cross
Cultural Issues in Counseling (4)
Focus on
attitudes and issues arising from different values and
cultural assumptions which affect therapeutic intervention.
Attention to cultural sub-groupings of ethnicity,
socioeconomic status, gender, sexual orientation, religion,
relationship status, age, disability, and other demographics
as they relate to the counseling process. Prerequisite:
CPSY 600 and Classified standing in the MS in Counseling
Psychology. [W]
CPSY 634
Psychopharmacology (3)
Examination of
the general principles underlying the use in modern practice
of drugs to treat the major classes of mental illness.
Includes antipsychotics, antidepressants, anxiolytics, mood
stablilizers, and special topics. Mechanisms of action,
drug interactions, pertinent aspects of differential
diagnosis, and psychiatric aspects of general medical
conditions will be discussed. Prerequisite: Graduate
Candidacy standing in the MS in Counseling Psychology. [F]
CPSY 636
Chemical Dependency (2)
Etiology,
diagnosis and treatment of substance abuse and dependence.
Prerequisite: Classified standing in the MS in Counseling
Psychology. [F]
CPSY 642
Behavioral Intervention (2)
Principles and
techniques of behavior acquisition and intervention.
Emphasis on respondent and operant conditioning. Ethical
and professional considerations. Prerequisite: CPSY 540 and
Classified standing in the MS in Counseling Psychology. [W]
CPSY 643
Cognitive Intervention (2)
Cognitive
theories of psychopathology and adaptive change.
Illustration, demonstration, and practice of techniques of
cognitive intervention. Prerequisite: CPSY 540 and
Classified standing in the MS in Counseling Psychology. [W]
CPSY 644
Dynamic Intervention (2)
Principles of
psychodynamic and contemporary psychoanalytic
psychotherapies, including and object relations and
self-psychology perspectives. Development of the ability to
recognize and respond to conscious, preconscious and
unconscious states, defenses, and transference and
countertransference dynamics. Prerequisite: CPSY 540 and
Graduate Candidacy standing in the MS in Counseling
Psychology. [F]
CPSY 645
Dyadic Intervention (2)tc
"CPSY
645 Dyadic Intervention (2)"
Emphasis on the
dynamics of couple interaction, as well as on the
examination of gender and ethnic issues. Integrates
intrapsychic, interpersonal, and systems perspectives.
Focus on enhancing communication and relationship processes
and skills. Prerequisite: CPSY 650 and Graduate Candidacy
standing in the MS in Counseling Psychology. [S]tc
"Emphasis
on the dynamics of couple interaction, as well as on the
examination of gender and ethnic issues. Integrates
intrapsychic, interpersonal, and systems perspectives.
Focus on enhancing communication and relationship processes
and skills. Prerequisite\: CPSY 650 and Graduate Candidacy
standing in the MS in Counseling Psychology. [S]"
CPSY 650
Theories of Family Counseling (4)
Focus on major
systemic and nonsystemic orientations in relationship,
couples, and family counseling. Attention to the
psychodynamics of relationships and transcultural family
systems, communications theory, and the role of family of
origin in individual and family functioning. Students will
relate their own family dynamics to the literature.
Prerequisite: Graduate Candidacy standing in the MS in
Counseling Psychology, [S]
CPSY 651
Techniques of Family Counseling (3)
Focus on the
development of clinical skills necessary for effective
relationship and family counseling. Laboratory experiences
will be provided through observation, demonstration, and
practice. Prerequisite: CPSY 650. [F]
CPSY 660
Theories of Group Counseling (4)
Focus on the
major approaches to group counseling. Emphasis on small and
large group processes and involvement in group experiential
activities designed to relate the clinical process to
theoretical explanations. Prerequisite: CPSY 650. [F]
CPSY 661
Techniques of Group Counseling (3)
Focus on the
development of clinical skills necessary for effective group
counseling. Laboratory experiences will be provided through
observation, demonstration, and practice. Prerequisite:
CPSY 660. [W]
CPSY 670
Theories of Developmental Counseling with Children and
Adolescents (4)
Focus on the
major approaches to therapeutic interventions with children
and adolescents. Attention to developmental issues and
tasks necessary for competent counseling with children and
adolescents, including biological, psychological, social,
and cultural processes that influence or disrupt normal
development. Prerequisite: Graduate Candidacy standing in
the MS in Counseling Psychology. [W]
CPSY 671
Techniques of Child and Adolescent
Counseling (3)
Focus on the
development of clinical skills necessary for effective
preventive, therapeutic, and consultative interventions with
and related to children and adolescents. Laboratory
experiences will be provided through observation,
demonstration and practice. Prerequisite: CPSY 670. [S]
CPSY 681
Practicum I (3)
A supervised
clinical practicum within the scope and practice of a
Marriage and Family Therapist. Application of counseling
procedures, with a focus on interviewing, assessment,
diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of familial and
relationship dysfunctions. Counts toward the MFT practicum
requirement (Business and Professional Code, Chapter 1054,
Section. 4980.43, a-c). Limited to 8 students per section.
Prerequisite: Graduate Candidacy standing in the MS in
Counseling Psychology; completion of or concurrent
enrollment in CPSY 512, CPSY 630, CPSY 631, CPSY 650, and
professional liability insurance. [F,W,S]
CPSY 682
Practicum II (4)
A continuation of
CPSY 681. Counts towards the MFT practicum requirement.
Prerequisite: CPSY 681 and professional liability
insurance. [F,W,S]
CPSY 691
Traineeship I (4)
A supervised
clinical practicum in settings designed to facilitate the
professional goals of the trainee within the scope and
practice of a Marriage and Family Therapist. Advanced
experience in interviewing, assessment, diagnosis, prognosis
and treatment of familial and relationship dysfunctions.
Counts towards the MFT practicum requirement (Business and
Professions Code, Chapter 1054, Section 4980.43, a-c).
Offered in a credit, no-credit basis only. Prerequisites:
Graduate Candidacy standing in the MS in Counseling
Psychology, CPSY 681, professional liability insurance, and
placement in an approved setting. [F,W,S]
CPSY 692
Traineeship II (4)
A continuation of
CPSY 691. Counts towards the MFT practicum requirement.
Offered on a credit, no-credit basis only. Prerequisite:
CPSY 691 and professional liability insurance, and placement
in an approved setting. [F,W,S]
CPSY 697
Master’s Examination in Counseling
Psychology (2)
Comprehensive
examination as the culminating activity in the MS in
Counseling Psychology program. Offered on a credit,
no-credit basis only. Prerequisites: Graduate Candidacy
standing in the MS in Counseling Psychology and approval of
the Program Coordinator based on satisfactory completion of
curricular components. [F,W,S]
Note:
CPSY 699 and CPSY 700 are not part of the 90-unit curriculum
and are offered only as needed.
CPSY 699
Independent Graduate Study (1-5)
Individual
supervision of counseling or investigation of an approved
project leading to a written report. Offered on a credit,
no-credit basis only. Requires a petition for individual
study approved by the sponsoring faculty member and the MS
Program Coordinator.
CPSY 700
Clinical Extension (4)
Additional
supervised clinical experience for students requiring more
than two quarters to complete the required hours for
Practicum or for Traineeship. May be repeated for credit.
Does not count toward requirements for the MS in Counseling
Psychology. Offered on a credit, no-credit basis only.
Requires approval by the sponsoring faculty member and the
MS Program Coordinator.
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