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Copyright: 2012 Australian Institute of Professional Counsellors

Institute Inbrief - 23/04/2014

WELCOME  

Welcome to Edition 201 of Institute Inbrief! In edition 200 of Inbrief we kick-off a very special series of articles focusing on common (and often pressing) challenges faced by Australian families. The first topic in this series was single-parent families due to death or separation.
 
In this edition, we explore challenges faced by blended and step (remarried) families. The next two editions will focus on families who experience domestic violence and families with a parent working away from home.
 
Also in this edition:
  • Watch free video lectures on YouTube
  • Articles and CPD updates
  • Social media updates
  • Upcoming seminar dates
Enjoy your reading!
 
Editor.
 
 
Join our community:
 
 
 
 
INTOstudies  
 
Bachelor of Counselling
 
Become A Counsellor or Expand On Your Qualifications
With Australia’s Most Cost Effective & Flexible
Bachelor of Counselling
 
AIPC is Australia’s largest and longest established educator of Counsellors. Over the past 22-years we’ve helped over 55,000 people from 27 countries pursue their dream of becoming a professional Counsellor.
 
The Bachelor of Counselling is a careful blend of theory and practical application. Theory is learnt through user-friendly learning materials that have been carefully designed to make your studies as accessible and conducive to learning as possible.
 
You can gain up to a full year’s academic credit (and save up to $8,700.00 with RPL) with a Diploma qualification. And with Fee-Help you don’t have to pay your subject fees upfront.
 
Here are some facts about the course:
  • Save up to $57,000.00 on your qualification.
  • Get started with NO MONEY DOWN using FEE-HELP.
  • Save up to $8,700.00 with RPL.
  • You will be supported by a large team of highly-qualified counselling professionals.
  • Study externally with individualised personal support.
  • Attend Residential Schools in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane to hone your practical skills and network with other students.
You can learn more here: www.aipc.edu.au/degree
 
 
Bachelor of Psychological Science
 
Earn-While-You-Learn With Australia's
Best Value-for-Money & Flexible
Bachelor of Psychological Science
 
Psychology is one of the most versatile undergraduate courses, leading to many different career opportunities. And now there's a truly flexible way to get your qualification – with internal or external study options. It means working while you study is a realistic alternative.
 
Cost of living pressures and lifestyle choices are evolving the way we learn and Australian Institute of Psychology (AIP) is paving the way through flexible, innovative learning models:
  • Save up to $34,800 on your qualification.
  • Get started with NO MONEY DOWN with FEE-HELP.
  • Earn while you learn with flexible external learning options.
  • Be supported by a large team of highly-qualified Psychology professionals.
  • Study internally or externally with individualised personal support.
  • Enjoy a flexible and supportive learning experience.
  • Benefit from less onerous course entry requirements.
AIP is a registered Higher Education Provider with the Australian Government, delivering a three-year Bachelor of Psychological Science. The Bachelor of Psychological Science is accredited by the Australian Psychology Accreditation Council (APAC), the body that sets the standards of training for Psychology education in Australasia.
 
APAC accreditation requirements are uniform across all universities and providers in the country, meaning that Australian Institute of Psychology, whilst a private Higher Education Provider, is required to meet exactly the same high quality standards of training, education and support as any university provider in the country.
 
You can learn more here: www.aip.edu.au/degree
 
 
Diploma of Counselling
 
Imagine Being Passionate About Your Work
And Assisting People Every Day Lead Better Lives
 
 
It’s rare these days to hear people talk about their work with true passion. You hear so many stories of people working to pay the bills; putting up with imperfect situations; and compromising on their true desires.
 
That’s why it’s always so refreshing to hear regular stories from graduates living their dream to be a Counsellor. They’re always so full of energy, enthusiasm and passion. There’s no doubt that counselling is one of the most personally rewarding and enriching professions.
 
Just imagine someone comes to you for assistance. They’re emotionally paralysed by events in their life. They can’t even see a future for themselves. They can only focus on their pain and grief. The despair is so acute it pervades their entire life. Their relationship is breaking down and heading towards a divorce. They can’t focus on work and are getting in trouble with their boss. They feel they should be able to handle their problems alone, but know they can’t. It makes them feel helpless, worthless. Their self-esteem has never been lower. They’re caught in a cycle of destruction and pain.
 
Now imagine you have the knowledge and skills to help this person overcome their challenges. You assist to relieve their intense emotional pain. You give them hope for the future. You assist to rebuild their self-esteem and lead a satisfying, empowered life.
 
As a Counsellor you can experience these personal victories every day. And it’s truly enriching. There is nothing more fulfilling than helping another person overcome seemingly impossible obstacles.
 
You can learn more here: www.aipc.net.au/course_dippro.php
INTOnews  
 
Free video lectures on YouTube
 
Visit the official AIPC YouTube Channel to watch a number of free video lectures, role-play videos, student and graduate interviews, plus much more! You can also interact by adding your comments, liking a video, or sharing them with your friends and social media contacts.  
 
And while you are there, make sure you become a subscriber (by clicking the subscribe button located on the right-side of the page, under the main banner). As a subscriber of the AIPC YouTube Channel you’ll be the first to access future series and informative videos.
 
Learn more and join today: www.aipc.net.au/youtube
INTOmentalhealth  
 
Managing insomnia: What we’ve learnt in the last 10 years
 
Sleep is a building block essential for our physical and mental wellbeing, potentially providing a period of restoration but also a time when we do not have to think, feel or act. However, when sleep is disrupted the result may be one of feeling tired, grumpy and cheated, where everything appears to require considerably more effort. If better sleep is not restored within a few days increased negative feelings can potentially impact on mood.
 
Insomnia is the most common sleep disorder and one of the most common health complaints in the general population. Insomnia is a distressing difficulty where sleep onset, sleep maintenance, early morning wakening or a combination of these symptoms occurs and sleep is insufficient for an individual’s needs, despite adequate time spent in bed to achieve sleep. The last decade has seen a significant increase in interest in insomnia and its impact on health, mental health and wellbeing. This interest has been matched by considerable advances in the understanding and treatment of insomnia, including its important bi-directional relationship with depression.
 
Click here to continue reading the original article via InPsych.
 
 
Scientists Pinpoint Brain’s Anti-Distraction Mechanism
 
Researchers from Simon Fraser University have discovered that environmental and/or genetic factors may hinder or suppress a particular brain activity that helps prevent us from distraction. The discovery could revolutionize doctors’ perception and treatment of attention-deficit disorders.
 
The study, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, is the first to reveal that our brains rely on an active suppression mechanism to avoid being distracted by irrelevant information when we want to focus on a particular item or task.
 
John McDonald Ph.D, an associate professor of psychology and Canada Research Chair in Cognitive Neuroscience, and other scientists first discovered the existence of the mechanism in his lab in 2009. But, until now, it was still unknown how it helps us ignore visual distractions.
 
Click here to continue reading the original article via PsychCentral.
INTOcounselling  
 
Blended and step (remarried) families
 
In the last section of last edition’s article we discussed the formation of a single-parent family as a result of the death of a family member. If that lone-parent family were to make another change and join forces with a second lone-parent family (or in some cases, just add in a spouse), function one (see previous article for further information regarding the functions of the family) of family formation and membership is wildly in need of re-examination, as now there is not only the re-defining of family based on the fact that someone is missing, but in addition, the ongoing need to negotiate inclusion with new people coming in.
 
The “blending” of a re-marriage means that the old norms, rules, and ways of gaining acceptance are now null and void. Blended and step family members generally do not realise this at the outset, wanting to re-create the biological family of origin (the children’s desire), or the first marriage (the spouses’ unconscious wish).
 
They cannot. In remarriages, there are at least three types of “emotional baggage” that members carry into the new situation, complicating the dynamics. These are unresolved issues from:
  • The families of origin of the spouses (to do with their parents and siblings),
  • The first marriage
  • The process of separation, divorce or death and the period between marriages (Carter and McGoldrick, 2005).
To the extent that either or both of the spouses may expect the other to take away this baggage, the remarriage is headed for trouble. The more the spouses can each work with their own emotional issues with people from the past, the more successful the new union is likely to be. Remarriage has perhaps more subtle challenges than almost any other family form, yet they are challenges worth studying and meeting. One-third of marriages registered in Australia have at least one partner who was previously married (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2006a), yet there are an equal or greater number of newly-formed stepfamilies which are cohabiting (Australian Institute of Family Studies, 2002). This means that more than half of the new couples forming families today are creating stepfamilies. By 2010, the stepfamily will be the most prevalent family type (Bernstein, 1989).
 
The challenges which remarried families face arise from the following dynamics.
 
New roles and responsibilities which are ambiguous, conflicting and usually complex
 
Children of step and blended families often have their position within the family changed. Where earlier a child was the “baby” of the family, now they might be older than all of their step-siblings. The stepparent role is equally difficult to come to grips with, let alone negotiate with the step-children. Children may suddenly find that they are being discouraged from seeing their non-custodial biological parent, or told that they must answer to a new “parent” whom they didn’t even know until recently.
 
All the children need to learn rules for how to “behave” in the new situation. Rules and consequences for breaking them are different than before as the family works out how to integrate two different systems of behaviour and discipline. Often stepparents start out thinking that they need to be able to discipline the step-children just as if they were their own, but the step-children rebel at that idea! Research has shown that family (re-) formation works better if the stepparent can work on becoming “friends” with the step-children early on, leaving issues of discipline to the biological parent. It seems to take about two years for stepfathers, for example, to be able to co-manage their children with their wives, but general blending takes much longer (Blended Family Research and Statistics, n.d).
 
Also, mothers and stepmothers may have conflicting role expectations which see them competing with each other for an authoritative voice in childrearing practices (Carter and McGoldrick, 2005). The more positively the custodial parent can manage the situation, however, the better the adjustment of the children will be.
 
No-win stepparent roles
 
Stepmothers are known to be particularly unhappy with their new husband, and ambivalent about their new parenting role, when the husband is the non-custodial parent of children who only come to visit. In such cases, the stepmother does not have much opportunity to become emotionally attached to the children, and their visits are experienced as a disruption which exploits her. She also has to accept that her husband’s co-parenting role is conducted much more with the ex-spouse than with herself.
 
A stepfather, for his part, often gets put into a double bind: called upon by the mother to help discipline her kids, but then criticised for the way he does that. Stepparents of both sexes frequently “overtry” to make the relationship work (their motivation possibly springing from unresolved issues in their past relationships). When the children do not respond positively, it is easy to become discouraged and feel like giving up.
 
Remarriages are said to need between three and five years to genuinely integrate the two families into one working unit, but many second-time-around spouses do not stay in the marriage long enough for that, with the majority of second marriages which dissolve doing so by five to six years (Blended Family Research and Statistics, n.d.).
 
Throughout the time of developing the stepparent-stepchild relationship, the children want to see their non-custodial biological parent. Although some remarried partners believe that it is better to forget about the past and get on with developing the new relationships, the children’s link to their biological parent is deeply significant, even if it was a rocky relationship. Thus family systems experts suggest that polite but low-dose relationships with the ex-spouse and the ex-spouse’s new marital partner work best (Dahl, Cowgill, & Asmundson, 1987).
 
Complicated, unclear boundaries in the family system
 
Where are the boundaries in a newly-blended family situation? Do the younger step-siblings get to play the teenager’s drums like the biological siblings do? Does the 17-year-old who used to have an 11:00 curfew now get to stay out until midnight if her younger stepbrother has always been allowed to do so? If people are staying in the same house, but now there are more people, do children have to give up their own space to make things work? How is time now allocated, and who gets to call themselves a family member? And what happens when people who did not know each other before the remarriage are suddenly supposed to call each other siblings? Teens may be aware of sudden incest taboos. In terms of stepparents, whose needs have primacy: the stepparent’s or the children’s? There is often competition, with stepparents failing to realise that they are at another level of the family hierarchy, and do not need to compete with the children.
 
The question of family integration
 
Myriad issues beg for resolution under the umbrella of boundaries. The capacity of the new family to integrate, for example, is highest when extended family members approve of the marriage (Duberman, 1975), but often there are conflicts among extended kin, and it is difficult to manage so many relationships, when one considers not only the extended family of the biological parents, but also that of the stepparents (Furstenberg and Cherlin, 1991). Family integration is also more likely to occur the longer the remarried unit has together. It is similarly harder when adolescents are part of the unit: logical, because their task as teens is to individuate: to separate from the family unit, not become more a part of it. The age having the most difficulty with integration seems to be that of ages 11 -13. Finally, integration happens more easily if the remarried partners have a child together (Kemp et al, 2012).
 
The matter of money
 
We have mentioned before and it bears repeating that traditional gender roles don’t work well in the case of blended and stepfamilies. Finances are a chief area of conflict for remarried families, and the reason for this is that families tend to assume (usually unconsciously) that the traditional roles of the sexes will continue. This ignores both contemporary economic reality (i.e., that both parents may be working) and also the reality that one or both of the partners may enter the remarriage with significant financial obligations from the first marriage.
 
Partners who do not pay alimony or child support can cause huge problems in post-divorce families. New wives often complain that a man contributes much more to the welfare of his children, who don’t live with him, than his stepchildren, who do (a bigger issue when she is not receiving child support payments). In fact, that same man may be in the unenviable position of having to decide whether he supports his biological children or his stepchildren, as the paycheque may not stretch to both. Generally, children do lose out financially when their parents remarry; children from intact (first marriage) families tend to receive more from their parents (White, 1992).
 
Ambiguity of emotional issues: wishing for resolution
 
Remarried families are about intensity. There were generally intense conflicted feelings – or the denial of those – in the families at the time of the deaths or divorce that caused the families to become lone-parent ones prior to the remarriage. One or both spouses may have had guilty feelings about their children or former spouse. It may have been too hard to face the conflicted feelings at the time, resulting in denial. The deep desperation for the new situation to work has led many blended or step families to continue the injunction: “You must love the other children as much as your own.” In truth, many step families never achieve loving the step siblings or children. If they do get there, however, it is likely to be far down the track: as noted above, three to five years, not three to five weeks.
 
Some research suggests that it is easier for remarried families to succeed if they have come together after death rather than divorce (Duberman, 1975). While this appeals intuitively on the grounds that a “ghost” cannot interfere with current family proceedings, the tendency is to idealise someone who died prematurely. Various collusions exist within a blended or stepfamily (the so-called “triangles”), but they are harder to recognise when they involve a dead person. One mistake remarried partners make is to present the new stepparent as a “replacement” for the dead parent. The older the children are, the less this is accepted (Carter and McGoldrick, 2005).
As support person, you may be able to help ease resistance against the slow process of integration by suggesting to the biological parent that he refers to “my wife/husband” (not your anything).
 
Pseudomutuality or fusion tendencies
 
Given that going through a separation is so painful, many families, still hurting and humiliated from the loss, make the determination, “This time I won’t rock the boat; this time I must make it work.” In so doing, they squash down the doubt, conflicts, and differences that they should deal with, creating a situation of pseudomutuality. This stance can be maintained for some time, but ultimately the needs will re-surface of a person who squashes down their feelings for the sake of “harmony”.
 
Even when conflicts and coming-together issues are seriously worked on without repressing them, it still takes years for remarried family members to get a sense of belonging, perhaps more with adolescents (Kemp et al, 2012). We must emphasise the fragility of a blended or stepfamily. Remarried people do not wait as long to leave a bad situation as they did the first time around, separating – if they are going to – by the five to six year mark as opposed to nine years on average for first-time married partners (Blended Family Research and Statistics, n.d.), so any tendencies towards fusion or pseudomutuality must be addressed early on, while there is still time to work things through.
 
Conflicts of loyalty
 
Children may feel put into a no-win situation. They are made to feel guilty if they don’t love the new stepparent. They fear that they will hurt or anger one parent by withholding love from the stepparent. But if they do love the stepparent, they are disloyal and will hurt or lose the love of the other parent. These feelings can be intensified if there is much guilt induction as a general dynamic in the family.
 
As with single-parent families, a number of issues beg to be addressed and compassionately resolved if the new family unit is to have a chance at staying together with a modicum of happiness. Parents’ life in their new romantic bubble means that their children’s experience and needs are often neglected as the parents try to manage two life-cycle activities simultaneously – courtship and parenting – which are usually sequential in first marriages. Because people want “normalcy”, they tend to think of the remarriage as an “event” rather than the fairly lengthy process that it is.
 
The unclear boundaries and multiple loyalties are hard to deal with, so there is often pressure to cut the non-custodial parental relationship out of the picture in order to create clarity in the remaining relationships. Although about 70 per cent of remarriages fail (Blended Family Research and Statistics, n.d.), they can and do succeed. If you are supporting a family in this situation, your knowledge of these dynamics will alert you to ways to help your supported family avoid those dark statistics.
 
In the next edition we explore challenges faced by families who experience domestic violence.
 
This article was adapted from AIPC’s MHSS Specialty Course “Supporting Challenged Families”. For more information, visit www.mhss.net.au.
 
References:
 
Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2006a). 4102.0 - Family Formation: Remarriage trends of
divorced people. Australian Social Trends, 1999. Retrieved on 19 June, 2012, from: hyperlink.
 
Australian Institute of Family Studies. (2002). Diversity and change in Australian families: Step families and blended families. Author. Retrieved on 19 June from: hyperlink.
 
Bernstein, A.C. (1989). Your, mine, and ours: How families change when remarried parents have a child together. New York: Norton.
 
Blended Family Research and Statistics. (2010). Blended family research and statistics. The Bonded Family, 2010. Retrieved on 12 June from: hyperlink.
 
Carter, B., and McGoldrick, M. (2005). The expanded family life cycle: Individual, family, and social perspectives (third edition). Boston, Massachusetts: Allyn and Bacon.
 
Dahl, A.S., Cowgill, K.M., & Asmundson, R. (1987). Life in remarriage families. Social work, 32(1), 40-44.
 
Duberman, L. (1975). The reconstituted family: A study of remarried couples and their children. Chicago: Nelson-Hall.
 
Furstenberg, F.F. & Cherlin, A. (1991). Divided families: What happens to children when parents part. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
 
Kemp, G., Segal, J., & Robinson, L. (2012). Guide to step-parenting and blended families: How to bond with stepchildren and deal with stepfamily issues. Helpguide.org. Retrieved on 6 June, 2012, from: hyperlink.
 
White, L. (1992). The effect of parental divorce and remarriage on parental support for adult children. Journal of family issues, 13(2), 234-250.
 
Course information:
 
 
Join our community:
 
 
 
 
INTObookstore  
 
The Institute has a list of recommended textbooks and DVDs that can add great value to your learning journey - and the good news is that you can purchase them very easily. The AIPC bookstore will give you discounted prices, an easy ordering method and quality guarantee!
 
This fortnight's feature is...
 
Name: Theories of Psychotherapy and Counselling – Concepts and Cases, 5th edition
Authors: Sharf, R.
AIPC Code: SHARF
AIPC Price: $96.30 (RRP $114.95)
ISBN: 978-084-003-3666
 
This book gives you an in-depth understanding of the major theories in counselling & psychotherapy and how they are effectively applied. You’ll find interesting case summaries and therapist-client dialogues that enrich your understanding of each theory’s practical importance to the therapists’ work with clients.
 
To order this book, contact your Student Support Centre or the AIPC Head Office (1800 657 667).
INTOarticles  
 
Challenges of Same-Sex Couple Families
 
Nowhere is a discussion of dynamics in the changing family more pertinent than with lesbian and gay couples, and of the four functions that a family is meant to carry out for its members, the question of family formation is primary. Although gays and lesbians are not permitted to marry in most locations around the world, they do come together in civil unions, and many post-divorce families consist of a gay or lesbian couple with the children of one or both of them from a previous heterosexual marriage.
 
All of the problems inherent in step families are relevant, but in addition, same-sex couples bear the burdens of secrecy and isolation in an attempt to avoid rejection from their families of origin and stigmatisation by the wider (heterosexual) society. In terms of creating a sense of family membership, gays and lesbians are also confronted with the lack of legal sanction for their committed relationships, and challenges with parental rights (Oswald, 2002).
 
Click here to continue reading this article.
 
 
What causes depression in the elderly?
 
As people age, they experience many changes to their physical health, lifestyles, and circumstances which affect their ability to function. Most of the changes have been identified as risk factors that make an older adult more vulnerable to depression. We can group the changes into three chief categories: changes in physical health or functioning, changes in mental health, and changes in circumstances or social support.
 
Click here to continue reading this article.
 
More articles: www.aipc.net.au/articles
INTOdevelopment  
 
Mental Health Academy – First to Knowledge in Mental Health
 
Get unlimited access to over 50 hours of CPD video workshops and over 100 specialist courses, for just $39/month or $349/year. Plus FREE and EXCLUSIVE access to the 10-hour Psychological First Aid program ($595.00 value).
 
We want you to experience unlimited, unrestricted access to the largest repository of professional development programs available anywhere in the country.
 
When you join our Premium Level membership, you’ll get all-inclusive access to over 50 hours of video workshops (presented by leading mental health experts) on-demand, 24/7.
 
You’ll also get access to over 100 specialist courses exploring a huge range of topics, including counselling interventions, communications skills, conflict, child development, mental health disorders, stress and trauma, relationships, ethics, reflective practice, plus much more. 
 
You’ll also get FREE and EXCLUSIVE access to the Psychological First Aid course ($595.00 value). The PFA course a high quality 10-hour program developed by Mental Health Academy in partnership with the Australian Institute of Psychology and the Australian Institute of Professional Counsellors, and framed around the internationally accepted principals of the NCTSN Field Operations Guide.
 
Benefits of becoming a premium member:
  • FREE and exclusive PFA course ($595.00 value)
  • Over 100 specialist courses to choose from
  • Over 50 hours of video learning on-demand
  • CPD endorsed by leading industry associations
  • Videos presented by international experts
  • New programs released every month
  • Huge range of topics and modalities
  • Online, 24/7 access
Some upcoming programs:
  • Dialectical Behaviour Therapy
  • A Constructive-Developmental Approach in Therapy: Case Studies
  • Sitting with Shadow: Case Studies
  • Emotionally Focused Therapy
  • Counselling the Disabled: Introduction to the Issues
  • Counselling the Disabled: A Look at What Works
  • Recognising Spiritual Emergence
  • Healing Spiritual Emergencies
  • Spiritual Emergence: Case Studies
  • Neuroscience, Mirror Neurons and Talking Therapies
Learn more and join today: www.mentalhealthacademy.com.au/premium
INTOconnection  
 
Have you visited the Counselling Connection Blog yet? There are over 650 interesting posts including case studies, profiles, success stories, videos and much more. Make sure you too get connected (and thank you for those who have already submitted comments and suggestions).
 
Free resources (including life effectiveness guides)
 
Boost your development with a range of free, downloadable educational resources from the resources page of the Counselling Connection blog. You can access free AIPC eBooks, free life effectiveness guides to support your personal development (and your loved ones’) and also review information on mental health services available Australia-wide.
 
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INTOtwitter  
 
Follow us on Twitter and get the latest and greatest in counselling news. To follow, visit https://twitter.com/counsellingnews and click "Follow".
 
Featured Tweets
 
Sleep disturbance in autism spectrum disorders: Recent advances in research and practice: https://bit.ly/1k2gTDQ
 
Shining a light on delayed sleep phase disorder during adolescence: https://bit.ly/1iaq0nq
 
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Visit the Grief Recovery Method website to watch free videos on loss and grief: https://bit.ly/1nDRXDG
 
Practical tips to tackle sleeping problems that you can implement straight away and (almost) effortlessly: https://bit.ly/1tvT3Wj
 
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INTOquotes  
 
"People can be more forgiving than you can imagine. But you have to forgive yourself. Let go of what's bitter and move on."
 
~ Bill Cosby
INTOseminars  
 
Many students of the Diploma of Counselling attend seminars to complete the practical requirements of their course. Seminars provide an ideal opportunity to network with other students and liaise with qualified counselling professionals in conjunction with completing compulsory coursework.
 
Not sure if you need to attend Seminars? Click here for information on Practical Assessments.
 
Below are upcoming seminars available during the first semester of 2014.
 
Click here to view all seminars dates for the remainder of 2014.
 
To register for a seminar, please contact your Student Support Centre.
 
BRISBANE (9.00am – 5.00pm)
 
The Counselling Process: 24-25/05
Communication Skills I: 21/06
Communication Skills II: 11/05
Counselling Therapies I: 31/05-01/06
Legal & Ethical Framework: 04/05
Family Therapy: 15/06
 
GOLD COAST (9.00am – 5.00pm)
 
Communication Skills I: 17/05
Communication Skills II: 21/06
Counselling Therapies II: 23-24/05
Legal & Ethical Framework: 13/06
 
SUNSHINE COAST (9.00am – 5.00pm)
 
The Counselling Process: 31/05-01/06
Family Therapy: 03/05
Case Management: 21/06
 
MELBOURNE (9.00am – 5.00pm)
 
The Counselling Process: 09-10/05, 13-14/06, 28-29/06
Communication Skills I: 11/05, 15/06
Communication Skills II: 17/05, 21/06
Counselling Therapies I: 17-18/05, 27-28/06
Counselling Therapies II: 26-27/04, 24-25/05
Legal & Ethical Framework: 26/04, 31/05
Family Therapy: 27/04, 01/06
Case Management: 03-04/05, 07-08/06
 
DARWIN (9.00am – 5.00pm)
 
Communication Skills I: 14/06
Communication Skills II: 14/06
Counselling Therapies II: 21/06
Case Management: 24/05
 
ADELAIDE (9.00am – 5.00pm)
 
The Counselling Process: 28-29/06
Communication Skills I: 17/05
Communication Skills II: 18/05
Counselling Therapies I: 24-25/05
Counselling Therapies II: 21-22/06
Legal & Ethical Framework: 03/05
Family Therapy: 04/05, 24/08
Case Management: 14-15/06
 
SYDNEY (9.00am – 5.00pm)
 
The Counselling Process: 02-03/05, 26-27/05, 27-28/06
Communication Skills I: 29/04, 29/05, 25/06
Communication Skills II: 29/04, 30/05, 26/06
Counselling Therapies I: 09-10/05
Counselling Therapies II: 23-24/06
Legal & Ethical Framework: 12/05
Family Therapy: 30/04
Case Management: 16-17/05
 
LAUNCESTON (9.00am – 5.00pm)
 
The Counselling Process: 13/06
Communication Skills I: 16/05
Communication Skills II: 16/05
Counselling Therapies I: 27/06
Counselling Therapies II: 11/04
Case Management: 02/05
 
HOBART (9.00am – 5.00pm)
 
Communication Skills I: 15/06
Communication Skills II: 15/06
Counselling Therapies I: 13/04
Counselling Therapies II: 22/06
Family Therapy: 18/05
 
PERTH (9.00am – 5.00pm)
 
The Counselling Process: 03-04/05, 07-08/06
Communication Skills I: 10/05
Communication Skills II: 11/05
Counselling Therapies I: 14-15/06
Legal & Ethical Framework: 18/05
Family Therapy: 24/05
Case Management: 31/05-01/06
 
 
Important Note: Advertising of the dates above does not guarantee availability of places in the seminar. Please check availability with the respective Student Support Centre.
 
 
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AIPC
230 Brunswick Street | Locked Bag 15
Fortitude Valley QLD 4006
(07) 3112 2000 (Australia)
1-800-657-667 (Toll Free)
+61-7-3112-2000 (International)