Foundation Course in Systemic Practice and Family Therapy
  • Theoretical concepts of family and systemic therapy.
  • Observation and discussion of real client/ family sessions.
  • Online course.
  • Live sessions with expert faculty.
  • 50 hours over 10 weeks
  • Cost:
    • Full fees: ₹55,000/-
    • Scholarship fee: ₹40,000/- (Applicable upon acceptance.)

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    This course is brought to you in partnership with

    Faculty

    Catherine Sanders

    Catherine Sanders is a clinical psychologist, family therapist and co-director of Bower Place. With over four decades of experience both as a practitioner and trainer, she has been a part of the changing landscape of multicultural Australian society. She is a member of the Clinical College of the Australian Psychological Society and clinical member of the Australian Association of Family Therapy.

    Dr Ashlesha Bagadia

    Dr Ashlesha Bagadia is a perinatal psychiatrist and family psychotherapist with over two decades of experience in mental health. She’s co-founder of The PARC. She has completed higher training in Perinatal and Women’s Mental Health, Family Systems Psychotherapy and Mentalisation Based Treatment. She trains and supervises therapists in managing personality disorders and complex issues.

    Malcolm Robinson

    Malcolm Robinson is a social worker, family and systemic therapist, mediator and director of Bower Place. He has over forty five years of clinical, therapeutic, teaching and management experience across the mental health, welfare, education, disability, and justice systems. He has expertise in working with complex co-morbid mental health matters and therapy with fractured and fragmented families.

    About the course

    This is an introduction to family therapy and systemic practice and is a starting step to working with families both in therapy and case management settings. The theory modules have been co-developed by Bower Place and The PARC with a focus on adapting to the Indian setting. This introductory course can lead to the Advanced Clinical Training Programme in Family Therapy in subsequent years. .

    Course schedule

    Week 1

    Introduction to systemic family work and concepts

    Week 2

    The young couple

    Week 3

    Parent/child relationship

    Week 4

    Parent/adolescent relationship

    Week 5

    Group Discussion

    Week 6

    The wider system: education, welfare, justice

    Week 7

    The couple relationship/marriage

    Week 8

    Wider family relationships

    Week 9

    The therapeutic system

    Week 10

    Group Discussion

    • 20 hours of self-paced learning, reading and testing.
    • 24 hours of live clinical sessions with real session observations.
    • 6 hours of interactive experiential supervision.

    Who is it for?

    This course will help counsellors, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers and all mental health clinicians understand the theory and practice of family systems therapy, adapted to Indian cultural settings. It is a starting step for those wishing to train further in providing formal family therapy. The course also provides an overview of family dynamics for clinicians who see families of their primary client for education, support and caregiver distress.

    Entry criteria

    • 2 years of clinical experience post Mphil, MD/DPM Psychiatry.
    • 5 years of therapy experience post masters in psychology and/or other recognised training in counselling skills.
    • Prior work with families not required but helpful.
    • Last date to apply is 15th August 2024.
    • Scholarship available to two merit candidates.
    • Last date for payment is 5th September 2024.
    • Selected applicants will be notified by 25th August 2024.

    Testimonials

    Slide 1
    Sreyoshi Ghosh
    Psychiatrist

    Overall, a good course and I would recommend it to therapists. The facilitators were knowledgeable and interactive and addressed all questions.My biggest take away was being reminded not to localise the problem solely in one person, even if they seemed to be struggling the most. The family sessions in the video were well linked to the theory sessions. I would have liked it if there were videos with grandparents too in the room and more coverage of transgenerational family dynamics.

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    Padma Srinivasa
    counselling psychotherapist

    I would recommend every therapist to at least do the foundation course, since even in individual therapy, we not only deal with the individual but also the influence of family in establishing the way with which the individual reacts to the situation and the ongoing patterns. Learning this and much more understanding of approaches to tackle these issues makes this course worth the money and time spent.

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    Apoorva Shetty
    clinical psychologist

    I would highly recommend this course for those entering the arena of family work.
    My biggest takeaway was how important systemic work is in our Indian context because most roles/rules get mixed up here. The facilitators were brilliant, observing them asking the right questions and managing their clients systematically but gently was a significant learning, besides understanding that one can only facilitate and nothing more.

    The quizzes were application based and helped me remember better and I plan to use these topics in my sessions too. I really liked the flow of the sessions and the discussions on cases which enabled me to understand the nuances better. Some concepts such as challenging families and situations including violence, infidelity etc. and the therapeutic system could have been more detailed.

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    Geetika Gulati
    counselling psychologist

    The course helped me understand the nuances of family relationships and its ripple effect and how each member in the family gets affected . The videos were helpful to get a glimpse into this. I have tasted a bit and long to learn more. It was new for me so I felt it was like the tip of the iceberg, but more theory would have been more helpful to understand more deeply.

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    Safwa Abdul Lateef
    group psychologist

    I have enjoyed the brief introductory program very much. The opportunity to engage actively with systemic concepts in light of my current practice with groups and families has been helpful. Facilitators made enough room to link the learning experience to the Indian context. We were surprised how much of the material brought to us from another continent is similar to the experiences of understanding systems in India. What stood out is the directive and active stance of the therapist when compared to the analytic frame I am familiar with. It was especially helpful in working with difficult boundary issues families bring to our work, setting up the contract up front and opening up blocks to communication in couple and family work.
    I look forward to future endeavours with family work with The PARC.

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    Partner organisations

    Bower Place is renowned for its training programs in Australia, which have supported more than 5000 practitioners seeking post graduate education and professional development in counselling and family & systemic practice. They also run a Family Therapy Complex Needs Clinic and a global subscriber knowledge portal.

    The PARC (Psychotherapy Advanced Resource Centre) delivers high calibre multidisciplinary training programmes in mental health for all healthcare workers, mental health professionals and caregivers.

    MBT Trainees