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222 │COLUMBIA INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY 2017-2018│ COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

values and professional and legal standards; legal standards that impact the field of professional counseling and marriage and family

therapy are examined in light of the realities of daily practice; and the future direction of counseling and marriage and family therapy

as a profession and ministry is explored. (3)

CNS 5342

Foundations of Marriage and Family Counseling

This course provides students with an overview of God's design for developing and maintaining meaningful relationships. His design

includes four foundational areas which include: 1) Receiving God's love as the starting point for all other relationships; 2) Finding one's

true identity as God's workmanship; 3) Loving others as we have been loved by God; and 4) Using what was learned from the first

three areas to connect well in personal and professional relationships. In order to establish a paradigm from which to work with couples

and families, students will be introduced to family therapy models and will receive practical resources for getting started. Couples and

families are viewed in the context of larger influential systems which have their own cultural and community distinctiveness. (3)

CNS 5410

Research, Statistics, and Evaluation

This course provides an advanced understanding of research statistics, report development, implementation, program evaluation,

needs assessment, and ethical and legal considerations. The course also will focus on research methodology, data analysis, and the

evaluation of research. Students apply this understanding in a variety of venues such as clinical mental health counseling and research,

marriage & family research, and research that needs to be done within the religious community. Students will be introduced to research

as it is conducted for single-subject designs, experimental/quasi-experimental designs, and system-oriented designs. Both quantitative

and qualitative processes are explored. Students conduct literature review and produce a research proposal. (3)

CNS 5420

Psychopathology

This course provides an understanding of mental illness with focus on the behavioral manifestations, experiential dynamics, and

relational/family impact of these disorders. Study is done in the most current

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders

(

DSM

) in order to learn the categories of symptoms of psychopathology necessary to diagnose and treat mental disorders. A variety of

perspectives on psychopathology are presented to form a whole-person (or bio-psy-cho-social-spiritual) and systemic context for

understanding. Students are challenged to determine theologically what they believe are the standards for pathology and how these

correlate with the DSM. (3)

Prerequisite: Undergraduate General Psychology or Introduction to Psychology

CNS 6015

Advanced Multi-Cultural Counseling

In this advanced course, you will focus on the application of counseling and therapy skills in multicultural and intercultural settings,

including a focus on multicultural counseling and cultural diversity issues as they relate to marriage and family therapy. You will study

the human needs in the world community in order to understand how messages relate to individuals and families with dramatically

different circumstances. You will evaluate the person and role of the multicultural counselor in light of his or her theology, personal

adaptation, communication, and counseling skills. You will address the multicultural counselor in the professional roles of pastor,

missionary, business person, professional counselor, marriage and family therapist. This course presupposes the validity and necessity

of involvement in a multicultural job or ministry, whether within the United States or in another country. You must have a minimum of

six months of cross-cultural exposure in an international setting to enroll in this course. (3)

CNS 6310

Human Growth and Development

This is a course in applied developmental counseling. Drawing from the biological, cognitive, socio-emotional, and spiritual markers set

forth by the major theories of human growth, students will be able to conceptualize the needs of their clients within a developmentally

appropriate framework. Personal exploration of one’s own developmental process is built into course assignments. Consideration also

is given to the process of spiritual transformation as an integral part of the Creator’s design for growth. (3)

Prerequisite: Undergraduate

Developmental Psychology

CNS 6410

Counseling Techniques

This course is an introduction to the basic counseling skills that are foundational to doing effective individual counseling and marriage

& family therapy. Students are required to understand and to successfully demonstrate basic counseling skills in the form of video-

recorded competencies in order to progress through the course. While counseling techniques and therapeutic skills are important, they

do not replace the person of the counselor as the primary intervention tool. Emphasis is on how a counselor impacts the therapeutic

alliance with clients and not just what the counselor does in the session to help facilitate client change. This course is taught largely

from a client-focused, strengths-based model utilizing client feedback in each session. (3)

CNS 6420

Diagnostics of Psychopathology

This course provides the student with advanced skills in the diagnostics of psychopathology, including coverage of the most current

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders

(

DSM

), with a focus on differential diagnosis. The student develops the ability to

synthesize skills and understanding from other courses into an integrated process of client engagement, assessment, case

conceptualization, and treatment planning. Students are trained to diagnose using role plays, and are being presented with atypical

symptoms, multiple diagnoses, and overlapping criteria. In order to develop a whole person and contextual understanding of pathology,

a variety of perspectives is presented, including biological, systemic, spiritual, developmental, intrapsychic, interpersonal, and cultural.

The student then builds treatment plans that demonstrate a grasp of the client’s strengths, resources, family structure/relationships,

pathology, and readiness for change. (3)

Prerequisite: CNS 5420

CNS 6430

Assessment

This course presents students with an understanding of the psychometric theories and practical approaches concerning the assessment

of individuals, couples and families, while equipping the student with the skills and competencies necessary to incorporate assessment

strategies into the helping process. Assessment, including marriage and family therapy methods and major mental health assessment

methods and instruments, are covered. Focus is placed on information-gathering methods, evaluating test validity and reliability