Modules
Year 1 (national level 6):
Dissertation (30 credits)
This module gives you the chance to further develop your counselling skills in a supportive environment. You’ll work with qualified counselling practitioners who will help you evaluate your progress and try out different interventions in simulated practice sessions with your peers, ensuring a safe and constructive learning experience. How can you apply your developing skills to real-world counselling situations? You’ll focus on both refining your techniques and exploring how to effectively use them in practice.
Enhancing Therapeutic Practice (30 credits)
How can you develop a deep understanding of the therapeutic relationship and the factors that influence it? In this module, you’ll explore the key elements of this relationship while focusing on your personal and professional growth. As you refine your own unique counselling style and approach, you’ll also critically assess the strengths and weaknesses of integrative practice, applying these insights to your own work. Through the use of a personal journal, you’ll engage in reflective learning, helping you to explore and deepen your understanding of the therapeutic process.
Research and Evidence in Counselling (30 credits)
How can you shape your future career with a counselling degree? This module offers workshops and seminars in various fields where your counselling skills could lead you. You’ll choose an area of interest and, through critical reflection, plan and carry out activities that will expand your knowledge and expertise, boosting your graduate prospects.
Contemporary Issues in Mental Health and Illness for Counselling Practitioners (30 credits)
In this module, you’ll explore different views on mental health, from medical to social and spiritual perspectives. What does mental health really mean, and how do we define illness? You’ll dive into important debates, like the validity of psychiatric diagnoses, and learn how these theories affect treatment. You’ll also discover how to work in mental health teams, assess risks, and understand the service user movement. Finally, you’ll reflect on your role in mental health and its latest developments.
Some modules have prerequisites. Read more about what this means in our Help and Advice article.