Home

To find out about the university-based clinic where the students work and faculty supervise

To meet the faculty and get to know their work and their play

To learn about the philosophy of the program as well as the courses offered

To learn more about the admission requirements and process

To meet current students

 

CURRICULUM

          The curriculum is research and theory intensive. Students are assumed to already be competent master’s level clinicians. Therefore, the in-residence clinical focus in our program will be on developing and testing intervention models, and learning clinical models that are evidence-based that can be used in research projects. We currently have several couple, parent, and child focused intervention research projects in progress that use MFT students as research assistants..

            All doctoral students take a Department of Child Development and Family Studies series of "Core Courses" (along with Ph.D. student colleagues in Developmental Studies and Family Studies) which offer students in-depth training in the research and theory that is common to these areas including intensive training in statistics and research methods. There is a conscious attempt to foster interdisciplinary connections. A total of six statistics and methods courses are included in the Departmental Core requirement, two of which are electives and may include training in qualitative research. All students will receive advanced training in cutting edge quantitative methods.

            In the MFT content courses, as well as in the Core Courses, there is an emphasis on reading original source material and learning how to evaluate critically original research. MFT content courses emphasize topics for which there is a body of research. We teach students to critique this research and expose them to the grants that support the research. Learning about the grant writing process and how to write quality professional papers is also emphasized. The heart of the MFT curriculum includes three clinical research courses in which students read the major research, in the original, related to child, family, couple, and health related interventions. Students learn to view this research critically and also learn about the grants that support it. Students also have the opportunity to interact with major researchers via audio or video conferencing.

           The program exposes the student to a broad range of theories of marriage and family therapy, and requires the student to view the theories critically, appreciating both strengths and weaknesses.

         The MFT Specialization exam is a capstone paper that students write after completing coursework and departmental preliminary exams. It is an extensive critical review of the literature in the student's area of interest that typically becomes the basis for the dissertation. Students also present on their research area each spring, beginning in the first year, in a program Professional Seminar. With each successive yearly presentation, it becomes closer to a formal dissertation proposal. A major emphasis of the program is timely completion of dissertations.

         As noted in the Degrees Offered section, beginning in Fall, 2010, all students will complete a combined concentration in MFT and Family Studies (FS). Because we are dropping some previously required MFT electives, students can complete the MFT/FS combined concentration by taking only one (net) extra course, and earn a degree that should be marketable in FS and well as MFT settings. This program will be one of the only MFT/FS programs in the world.

           Students receive intensively supervised clinical experience in the Purdue Individual, Couple and Family Therapy Clinic (PICFTC) in their first year, with the goal of developing evaluation research competence. The physical location of our Clinic was moved to Family Services of Lafayette during the fall of 2009 (see section of website on Clinic), but clinical supervision is done by Purdue MFT faculty as before. Students may also participate in clinical research projects throughout the program. Faculty supervision of clinical work is intense, and emphasizes supervision and the use of one-way mirror. However, other supervision formats are used, such as video playback, co-therapy, and case conferences. Students receive both individual and group supervision. In the second year, students are trained in family therapy supervision and receive live supervision of their supervision. To round out clinical training, students may take a clinical internship, if they have not completed 1000 face-to-face client contact hours, including master's degree hours. Students needing clinical internships will work for 9 to 12 months in a community setting. While students may complete internships locally, many take specialized training in nationally known settings. Students who received a state license in MFT and/AAMFT clinical membership, or who complete the 1000 hours before internship, are eligible for an alternate internship that may include additional research and/or academic training. Through the program, students complete the clinical hour requirements, as well as the coursework, for clinical membership in the American Association for Marriage in Family Therapy (AAMFT).

           W hile it is sometimes possible to finish the course work (not including internship) in two years we discourage most students from doing so and typically recommend a more relaxed pace of three years. Beginning in fall, 2007, we required MFT students to mostly complete their doctoral dissertation before the internship unless the internship is a research internship whose purpose includes gathering data for the dissertation. Since most students work while completing dissertations, we are making the advertised length of the complete program five years, although several current students (who identified dissertation topics early) will finish the program (start to dissertation defense) in as little as three years.

         T he curriculum is an evolving one which endeavors to meet both the requirements established by the Commission on Accreditation for Marriage and Family Therapy Education (COAMFTE), and to extend the knowledge of the Field. As previously noted, students also take core departmental courses. Purdue University provides student support services for all students.

   
 
   

Home || Clinic || Faculty || Program || Admission || Students || Forms |
|| Purdue || Consumer & Family Sciences || CDFS |

Fowler Memorial House 1200 W. State Street
West Lafayette, IN 47907-2055
Phone: (765) 494-2939
Fax : (765) 494-0503
Program director: Doug Sprenkle
e-mail : sprenkled@aol.com

webmaster
Designed by Gunnur Karakurt & Beth Bourdeau