What every therapist knows about: Common features of advanced professional mental health education

A mental health professional degree program requires demonstrated mastery of these things: In other words:
Understanding of the biological, psychological, and social aspects affecting the development, function, and variability of human mental and interpersonal processes, Why we think, feel, and act the way we do, including

  • biological explanations,
  • explanations based on the culture and social environment we live in,
  • and explanations based on personal experiences.
including pathologies associated with addiction, stress, trauma, adjustment, disability, loss, and interpersonal conflict. How various challenges in life (like those listed to the right) commonly affect our patterns of thought, feeling, and behavior.
Assessment and diagnosis of dysfunctions in individual mental health, interpersonal relationships, and group dynamics.  Figuring out if a person, a couple, a family, or a group is not doing as well as they could in some important way.And, if there is an important problem, figuring out how to best explain it – in terms of biology, social and cultural patterns, and/or as a response to some particular challenging experiences.
Counseling and psychotherapy methods for group, family, couples, and individual treatment. Effective ways to help people address the particular problems they are experiencing.And how to effectively provide help in a therapy group, while working directly with a couple or a family, and one on one.