Different stories : multicultural issues in the training of clinical psychologists

Bibliography: leaves 51-55. === Despite an ever-growing body of international literature on multicultural counselling or psychotherapy, comparatively little has been written on multicultural counselling in South Africa, or the need to train South African clinical psychologists to work in a multicult...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ahrends, Ilse
Other Authors: Swartz, Sally
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13459
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-134592020-10-06T05:11:29Z Different stories : multicultural issues in the training of clinical psychologists Ahrends, Ilse Swartz, Sally Clinical Psychology Bibliography: leaves 51-55. Despite an ever-growing body of international literature on multicultural counselling or psychotherapy, comparatively little has been written on multicultural counselling in South Africa, or the need to train South African clinical psychologists to work in a multicultural milieu. My own experience of the training course in clinical psychology at the University of Cape Town was that there had been very little formal or informal discussion of multicultural issues in counselling. Considering South Africa's multicultural population, I wondered whether we had been sufficiently equipped to work with a culturally, racially and socio-economically diverse clientele. Seventeen clinical psychology interns at the University of Cape Town were interviewed to find out their perceptions of this aspect of the course. A qualitative, ethnomethodological approach to the study was taken. A semi-structured interview schedule was used so that the interns' responses could be explored further. Analysis of the data was guided by social constructionist and discourse theory. The interns felt that it had been difficult to talk about multicultural issues during the training. Their reasons for this are discussed in the light of a politically motivated preference for talk about similarities rather than differences between people. Recommendations are made for an awareness component in the training to increase sensitivity among interns to their own biases and prejudices, and to their cultural heritage; and for a multicultural perspective to all training in counselling and psychotherapy. 2015-07-14T08:55:48Z 2015-07-14T08:55:48Z 1995 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13459 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities Department of Psychology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Clinical Psychology
spellingShingle Clinical Psychology
Ahrends, Ilse
Different stories : multicultural issues in the training of clinical psychologists
description Bibliography: leaves 51-55. === Despite an ever-growing body of international literature on multicultural counselling or psychotherapy, comparatively little has been written on multicultural counselling in South Africa, or the need to train South African clinical psychologists to work in a multicultural milieu. My own experience of the training course in clinical psychology at the University of Cape Town was that there had been very little formal or informal discussion of multicultural issues in counselling. Considering South Africa's multicultural population, I wondered whether we had been sufficiently equipped to work with a culturally, racially and socio-economically diverse clientele. Seventeen clinical psychology interns at the University of Cape Town were interviewed to find out their perceptions of this aspect of the course. A qualitative, ethnomethodological approach to the study was taken. A semi-structured interview schedule was used so that the interns' responses could be explored further. Analysis of the data was guided by social constructionist and discourse theory. The interns felt that it had been difficult to talk about multicultural issues during the training. Their reasons for this are discussed in the light of a politically motivated preference for talk about similarities rather than differences between people. Recommendations are made for an awareness component in the training to increase sensitivity among interns to their own biases and prejudices, and to their cultural heritage; and for a multicultural perspective to all training in counselling and psychotherapy.
author2 Swartz, Sally
author_facet Swartz, Sally
Ahrends, Ilse
author Ahrends, Ilse
author_sort Ahrends, Ilse
title Different stories : multicultural issues in the training of clinical psychologists
title_short Different stories : multicultural issues in the training of clinical psychologists
title_full Different stories : multicultural issues in the training of clinical psychologists
title_fullStr Different stories : multicultural issues in the training of clinical psychologists
title_full_unstemmed Different stories : multicultural issues in the training of clinical psychologists
title_sort different stories : multicultural issues in the training of clinical psychologists
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/13459
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