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CL 938: Psychological Assessment III
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
This course will focus on developing theoretical and practical skills in projective assessment including the Rorschach, TAT, sentence completion techniques, projective drawings, and dreams. Students will become familiar with both sides of the controversies surrounding projective tests. Information derived from projective techniques will be integrated with other forms of assessment data to develop clear, user friendly, case focused reports that answer the referral question. There will also be an emphasis on using assessment results to enhance the therapeutic process. Prerequisite: CP 930 and CP 931
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CL 938 - Psychological Assessment III
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CL 939: Research Designs&Methods III: Adv Quant
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
The goal of this class is to provide students with an overview of advanced quantitative methods including multivariate statistical analysis and scale development procedures. This course will help students become skilled in reading and understanding these designs, and to recognize the broad principles and application of multivariate statistical models for the design of quantitative studies and the treatment of data as well as statistical methods employed in scale development. Topics include: multivariate analysis of variance and covariance, corrections for multiple comparisons, factor analysis, binary logistic regression, multiple regression, discriminant analysis, power, meta-analysis and the use of statistical software, namely Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS). Prerequisites: CP 932, CP 926
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CL 939 - Research Designs&Methods III: Adv Quant
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CL 940: Research Designs & Method IV: Adv Qual
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
The course focuses on one or two of the major human science traditions, such as: phenomenology, hermeneutics, heuristic approaches, ethnography, grounded theory, biography, and case study. This quarter the theory and praxis of hermeneutics, with an emphasis on social constructionism and metabletics (investigation of historical changes) are covered in depth, and students gain more extensive, hands-on experience with these particular qualitative approaches. Emphasis is given to ethics and diversity, as well as the parallels between research and clinical practice. Prerequisites: CP 932, CP 933
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CL 940 - Research Designs & Method IV: Adv Qual
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CL 950: Personal Psychotherapy
0.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
During the program, students must take part in a total of 60 hours of personal psychotherapy (preferalby with a depth orientation) with a licensed psychotherapist or certified analyst of their choice. Pass/No Pass
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CL 950 - Personal Psychotherapy
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cp 501: Theoretical Foundations of Psychotherapy
2.50 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
This course introduces the philosophical foundations of contemporary psychotherapy and examines the theories which contribute to its practice. In order to provide students with depth, cultural, and historical perspectives, the course surveys the development of a variety of theories, including classical psychoanalysis, object relations, cognitive behavioral, self psychology, archetypal, feminist, humanistic, and transpersonal.
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cp 501 - Theoretical Foundations of Psychotherapy
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cp 502: Psychopathology
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
The varieties of psychopathology as presented in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders are reviewed in this course. Themes to be pursued include the history of pathologies as well as their diagnoses.
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cp 502 - Psychopathology
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cp 504: Freud's Depth Psychology
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Students explore the emergence of the "talking cure" and the profound repercussions this therapeutic development has had on the modern practice of psychotherapy. Themes include the psychoanalytic view of human nature, defense mechanisms, Freud's topology of the unconscious, and the relationship between psyche and culture.
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cp 504 - Freud's Depth Psychology
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cp 505: Jung's Depth Psychology
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
This course surveys Jung's contributions to depth psychology, including his work on archetypes, the Self, the objective psyche, the transcendent function, individuation, dreams, and active imagination. Jungian and post-Jungian theorists such as von Franz, Fordham, Samuels, and Edinger may be explored.
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cp 505 - Jung's Depth Psychology
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CP 507: Myth, Literature & Religious Studies I
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Mythology, literature, and religion reveal the complex metaphoric and symbolic nature of the human psyche and its search for meaning. To be fully present to the polyphonic nature of experience and imagination, psychology must pay close attention to the perennial issues that guide the understanding of being human. Opening the interdisciplinary connections between psychology and the studies of myth, literature, and religion expands and enriches the understanding of therapeutic relationships, psychopathology, therapeutic interventions, and healing.
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CP 507 - Myth, Literature & Religious Studies I
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CP 508: Myth, Literature & Religious Studies II
2.00 Credits
Pacifica Graduate Institute
Mythology, literature, and religion reveal the complex metaphoric and symbolic nature of the human psyche and its search for meaning. To be fully present to the polyphonic nature of experience and imagination, psychology must pay close attention to the perennial issues that guide the understanding of being human. Opening the interdisciplinary connections between psychology and the studies of myth, literature, and religion expands and enriches the understanding of therapeutic relationships, psychopathology, therapeutic interventions, and healing.
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CP 508 - Myth, Literature & Religious Studies II
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