PYN016 Collaborative Practice 2 - Narrative Therapy
To view more information for this unit, select Unit Outline from the list below. Please note the teaching period for which the Unit Outline is relevant.
Unit code: | PYN016 |
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Prerequisite(s): | PYN001 |
Credit points: | 12 |
Timetable | Details in HiQ, if available |
Availabilities |
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CSP student contribution | The Commonwealth supported place student contribution amount for this unit depends upon the course of study. Find out more |
Pre-2021 CSP student contribution | The pre-2021 commonwealth supported place (CSP) contribution amount only applies to students enrolled in a course prior to 2021. To learn more, visit our Understanding your fees page. |
Domestic tuition unit fee | $3,216 |
International unit fee | $4,488 |
Unit Outline: Semester 2 2025, Kelvin Grove, Internal
Unit code: | PYN016 |
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Credit points: | 12 |
Pre-requisite: | PYN001 |
Coordinator: | Simon Hinch | simon.hinch@qut.edu.au |
Overview
Building on the introduction to constructionist philosophy and therapeutic practices offered previously, this unit is designed to provide you with an in depth understanding of the history, philosophy, and practice of Narrative Therapy. You will be introduced to its application in individual, relational and collective contexts, examining its relationship with social justice, collective action, and its contemporary interdisciplinary integration with affective, body based and neuroscience informed practices.
Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of this unit you will be able to:
- Critically examine and articulate the history, central philosophical tenants, and principles of narrative practice.
- Utilise and demonstrate key skills and maps for narrative practice in counselling contexts, including, externalising, reauthoring, re-membering, absent but implicit, outsider witnessing, collective narrative practices and therapeutic documentation.
- Critically apply skills of interprofessional Collaboration to examine the contemporary application of narrative practices with current social issues, and with diverse populations and therapoutic contexts.
- Reflect upon and evaluate the role of power, privilege, and marginalisation in the context of contemporary counselling practice.
Content
This unit will provide an overview of the theory and practice of contemporary narrative therapy, with specific reference to.
- The history & philosophical underpinnings of Narrative practice.
- The primary skills and conversational maps of Narrative practice including, Statements of Position, Re-authoring, Re-membering, Outsider witnessing, Definitional ceremonies and Collective Narrative practices such as the Tree of Life.
- Narrative practice and its relationship with social Justice, and community based social action with diverse communities.
- The affective turn in narrative therapy and the contemporary integration of affective, body based and neuroscience informed practices.
Learning Approaches
- This unit uses an experiential learning framework to develop your understanding of narrative practice and its application with diverse populations and contexts.
- PYN016 is offered as weekly workshop across a 13-week semester and incorporates lectures, small group discussions, practice demonstrations.
- You will also participate in exercises and activities designed to clarify and deepen your understanding of course content and to provide an opportunity for skill development.
Feedback on Learning and Assessment
Formative feedback will occur via facilitator and peer evaluation through in class learning activities and submission of a reflective Journal.
Summative feedback will take the form of a demonstration, critique, and reflective written tasks in addition to a student facilitated workshop.
Assessment
Overview
The Assessment items in this unit combine, theory, practice, and critical reflection. They will require you to demonstrate your understanding of the central philosophical tenants of narrative practice and your capacity to apply these in therapeutic conversation. Additionally, you will be required to critically apply your learning to contemporary social issues and practice contexts.
Unit Grading Scheme
7- point scale
Assessment Tasks
Assessment: Reflective Journal
You will be required to write and upload a total of 6 reflective journal entries based on the course material between weeks 1-8. Each of these entries will be a maximum of 500 words in length and will focus on a broad range of theories and practices relevant to narrative therapy, with a focus on how these relate to your emerging personal practice framework. Following week 8 you will then select and submit 2 of these reflective journal entries for Marking and feedback.
This assignment is eligible for the 48-hour late submission period and assignment extensions.
Assessment: Demonstration & Critique
Taking on the role of Counsellor you will be required to record and submit a 45-minute video, demonstrating the application of various narrative maps in the context of a counselling conversation. Additionally, as relevant to professional and Supervisory practice, you will also provide a 2500-word paper offering a narrative formulation and analysis of the conversation, highlighting the methods of inquiry utilised and its influence on the therapeutic conversation and session outcomes.
This assignment is eligible for the 48-hour late submission period and assignment extensions.
Assessment: Workshop
In the final weeks of the unit, you will be required in a small group to facilitate a 1.5hr workshop with your peers on contemporary approaches to narrative practice. This workshop will require you to examine a contemporary social issue and demonstrate narrative practices that have been utilised to respond to its impact on diverse individuals, families, or communities.
Academic Integrity
Academic integrity is a commitment to undertaking academic work and assessment in a manner that is ethical, fair, honest, respectful and accountable.
The Academic Integrity Policy sets out the range of conduct that can be a failure to maintain the standards of academic integrity. This includes, cheating in exams, plagiarism, self-plagiarism, collusion and contract cheating. It also includes providing fraudulent or altered documentation in support of an academic concession application, for example an assignment extension or a deferred exam.
You are encouraged to make use of QUT’s learning support services, resources and tools to assure the academic integrity of your assessment. This includes the use of text matching software that may be available to assist with self-assessing your academic integrity as part of the assessment submission process.
Breaching QUT’s Academic Integrity Policy or engaging in conduct that may defeat or compromise the purpose of assessment can lead to a finding of student misconduct (Code of Conduct – Student) and result in the imposition of penalties under the Management of Student Misconduct Policy, ranging from a grade reduction to exclusion from QUT.
Resources
Resource Materials
Prescribed text(s)
White M. (2007). Maps of narrative practice. New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company.
Recommended text(s)
Zimmerman, J., & Tomm, K. (2018). Neuro-narrative therapy: New possibilities for emotion-filled conversations. W W Norton & Co.
Risk Assessment Statement
There are no out of the ordinary risks associated with this unit.