Apr 29, 2024  
Academic Catalog 2021-2022 
    
Academic Catalog 2021-2022 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

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PSY-712 Multicultural Psychology

4 semester credits
The Multicultural Psychology course has been designed to engage students in learning about the psychological foundations of the influences and effects of culture and society on individuals and groups, and their interactions. Students will learn about culture and society’s potential impacts on the experience and management of similarity and difference in the therapeutic relationship, in clinical assessment, in research practices, in everyday life, and on the interpretation of empirical data. The course consists of an academic and an experiential component in order to provide exposure to the knowledge and self- and other- awareness that facilitates multicultural competence. Students will learn to place in psychological context American and cross-cultural experience, multiculturalism and diversity, and individual differences within and amongst people.
Delivery Method: Distance/Electronically Mediated
Grading Default: Letter Only
Learning Outcome(s):  

  1. Describe how a nation’s history and culture affect individual and interpersonal experience.
  2. Assess and critique multicultural approaches in psychology.
  3. Describe how cultural variables influence the etiology and manifestations of mental health and illness, including but not limited to knowledge of culture-specific diagnoses.
  4. Describe how normative values within a culture interface with individual differences to influence illness and help-seeking behaviors, interactional styles, and worldviews.
  5. Describe and assess variables of special relevance to identified groups, such as cultural orientation, acculturative stress, and the effects of discrimination.
  6. Identify and critique epistemologies, research concepts, methods, instruments, and results based on their tacit assumptions related to individuals or groups and to propose alternate methods/interpretations.
  7. Identify and evaluate how one’s own cultural heritage, gender, class, ethnic/racial identity, sexual orientation, disability, religion, language, and age cohort help shape personal values, assumptions, and biases related to identified groups.



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