Integrative Relational PsychotherapyMaster’s degrees (Continuing Education)

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    Relational Integrative Psychotherapy

    About the Master's degree

    The aim of this Master’s programme is to provide, through a humanistic and integrative theoretical approach combined with a practical and experiential methodology, the skills to support therapeutic processes, personal growth, and development in healthcare settings, educational centres, or within social and community intervention.

    The programme will provide guidance for connecting with oneself and for developing the attitudes necessary to establish a therapeutic relationship based on inquiry, attunement, and engagement.

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    Designed for

    Mainly psychology graduates who hold a Master’s degree or have therapeutic experience, and who wish to work in healthcare, education, or social intervention.

    • Campus:

      Bilbao Campus

    • Programme name:

      Integrative Relational Psychotherapy

    • Duration/credits:

      From September to June (two academic years). - 60 ECTS

    • Language

      Spanish

    • Number of places

      25

    • Programme type

      On campus

    • Application process:

      Admission process open

    • Faculty:

      Health Sciences
    • Share:

    Master's degrees

    Online information sessions

    Don't miss our online information sessions from November 17 to 27 and discover our full range of Master's degree programmes.

    Testimonial by Itsaso Rodriguez Domínguez Master's in Integrative Psychotherapy

    The two years of study have been a source of knowledge, inspiration and personal and professional growth that underpin my daily work.

    Itsaso Rodriguez DomínguezSecond graduating class
    Testimonial by Maitane Urruzola Master’s in Integrative Psychotherapy

    A unique and innovative way of teaching that encourages you towards professional and personal growth. You’ll find yourself daring to do things di...

    Maitane UrruzolaSecond graduating class
    Testimonial by Paula Martín Castresana Master’s in Integrative Psychotherapy

    The experience of this Master’s has been an adventure full of challenges, knowledge, growth, and great human warmth.

    Paula Martín CastresanaSecond graduating class
    Testimonial by Noa Pereiro López Master’s in Integrative Psychotherapy

    Doing this Master’s has been an enriching opportunity for both personal and professional growth.

    Noa Pereiro LópezGraduate of the first cohort, Autonomous Community of Galicia
    Testimonial by Edurne Martínez Master’s in Integrative Psychotherapy

    Doing this Master’s has far exceeded any expectations or fantasies I might have imagined.

    Edurne Martínez RivasGraduate of the 1st graduating class, Vitoria-Gasteiz

    Introduction

    Despite the long-standing presence of humanistic psychology in a significant number of North American universities, this approach is largely marginal in universities in our country, usually limited to brief mentions and concise descriptions of its key figures and main ideas within the context of a particular course subject.

    Thus, while in the United States and Canada the so-called third wave of psychotherapy has gradually gained ground, developing its principles and research, in Spain humanistic psychotherapists have had to create their own training programmes through their own associations, operating outside academia and relying heavily on self-management.

    The mistrust shown by many of those responsible for training psychologists within state institutions may stem from the influence of certain actions once led by therapists linked to the humanistic movement — what Ramón Rosal (Erich Fromm Institute of Humanistic Psychology) refers to as the “adolescent stage of the movement”.

    These practices have undoubtedly helped to trivialise and taint, with a certain aura of mystical magic in some circles, everything associated with this movement.

    However, more than fifty years after the emergence of the humanistic movement, the message conveyed by authors such as Abraham Maslow, Carl Rogers or Rollo May remains relevant within our training programmes. Their contributions concerning human growth and development, the importance of the therapeutic bond and authenticity in the relationship, the therapist’s active attitude, communication and interpersonal connection, as well as listening and empathy, are today accepted across all approaches, even if the theoretical foundations supporting them are not always conveyed.

    True to this legacy, and based on the model developed by Richard G. Erskine, the Master’s in Integrative Relational Psychotherapy provides training in a unifying therapeutic approach that recognises the inherent value of every individual and responds appropriately and effectively to the person on the affective, behavioural, cognitive, physiological and spiritual levels of functioning. 

    Masterclass Richard Erskine

    Life scripts

    Professor Richard Erskine, recognised with the Eric Berne Memorial Award for the third time, officially opened the Master’s Degree in Integrative Relational Psychotherapy offered by the University of Deusto on 12 September 2018 with the Masterclass entitled "Life scripts: the psychotherapy of unconscious relational patterns".

    Master’s Highlights

    The Master's in Integrative Psychotherapy is designed for psychology professionals working in the fields of health, education, or social intervention.

    The programme will enable them to develop a humanistic and integrative theoretical approach, rooted in Rogers’ Client-Centred Psychotherapy, Berne’s Transactional Analysis, Perls’ Gestalt therapy, Kohut’s Self Psychology, and the work of British psychologists in Object Relations.

    Additionally, from a practical perspective and through an experiential methodology, it will provide them with the tools for self-contact and the development of the attitudes and skills necessary to establish a therapeutic relationship based on inquiry, attunement, and engagement.

    This is therefore a personal integration process in which both students and therapists must also engage.

    However, while an emphasis on the therapist’s personal growth is essential, the Master’s also aims to foster among students a commitment to the pursuit of knowledge in psychotherapy and related fields, with a view to ongoing dialogue with psychotherapists of different orientations that keeps them up to date with developments in the discipline.

    Student profile of the Master's in Integrative Psychotherapy

    DEUSTO

    GRANTS AND STUDENT FINANCE

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    DEUSTO

    GRANTS AND STUDENT FINANCE

    If you are going to study at the University of Deusto, you can benefit from our grants programme. Find out about the entry requirements and the grants promoted by other organisations.

    Grants and scholarships

    COURSE FEES

     

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