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Perceived Impact of Person-of-the-Therapist Training (POTT) Model on Drexel University Master of Family Therapy Postgraduates’ Clinical Work
Perceived Impact of Person-of-the-Therapist Training (POTT) Model on Drexel University Master of Family Therapy Postgraduates’ Clinical Work
Details
Title
Perceived Impact of Person-of-the-Therapist Training (POTT) Model on Drexel University Master of Family Therapy Postgraduates’ Clinical Work: A Grounded Theory Study
Author(s)
Apolinar Claudio, Florina Lauriana
Advisor(s)
Watson, Marlene F.
Keywords
Family psychotherapy
;
Clinical psychology
;
Counseling psychology
;
Psychology
;
Family therapists--Training of
Date
2016-05
Publisher
Drexel University
Thesis
Ph.D., Couple and Family Therapy -- Drexel University, 2016
Abstract
The person-of-the-therapist training (POTT) model, developed by renowned family therapist Harry Aponte, and implemented in the Drexel University Master of Family Therapy curriculum, was the training model of focus for the study. Postgraduates of the Drexel University Master of Family Therapy Program were interviewed using grounded theory methods on the perceived impact of person-of-the-therapist training on clinical effectiveness. The generated theory revealed that postgraduates developed a purposeful therapeutic presence; participants believed that their presence, way of being, and the way that they provided therapy, way of doing, had transformed. The stance they had was self-accepting, self-aware, compassionate, empathic, and grounded. Therefore, the therapy they provided was decisive, thoughtful, compassionate, self-aware, and connected-to-self. Although attention to the person or self-of-the-therapist was present in the couple and family therapy literature, research on the effectiveness of person-of-the-therapist training is virtually nonexistent. Thus, the present study addressed this gap in the literature; particularly because the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy, the field’s primary professional organization, includes person-of-the-therapist elements in established competency standards. Moreover, the marriage and family therapy profession is growing, highlighting the importance of effective training to ensure competent clinical services.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1860/idea:7709
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