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Doctor of Philosophy in Marriage and Family Therapy

General Family Therapy Specialization

The General Family Therapy specialization allows Learners to select courses from a broad range of electives to fit their personal and professional ambitions. In this specialization, Learners must complete MFT8101 and MFT8102 and then select four courses (12 credit hours) from the Marriage and Family Therapy curriculum at the 7000 or 8000 level. Courses from the larger School of Behavioral and Health Sciences may be considered to fill this requirement with approval on a case by case basis. Learners in this specialization are required to focus their course projects, internship work, and dissertation research on issues related to marriage and family therapy.

General Family Therapy Specialization Courses

Listed are the courses unique to the specialization or concentration. Additional fundamental courses are also required for degree completion. Please see the full Course Catalog or contact an Enrollment Advisor by email admissions@ncu.edu or phone 866-776-0331 for detailed information.

Course CodeNameCourse Description
MFT8101Advanced Theories in MFTThis course is designed to be an advanced survey of the theoretical literature related to the practice of marriage and family therapy. The course includes an integrative and critical thinking focus on systems theory, attachment theory, agentive theory, common factors and the metaframeworks perspective. Course content will be related conceptually to clinical concerns.
MFT7103Research Methods in MFTThis doctoral-level course focuses on the fundamentals of quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods approaches to research in marriage and family therapy. Learners gain an understanding of the strengths and limitations of each approach, and how these methods apply to a research topic. The concepts of research ethics, scholarly research writing, and developing a research proposal will also be explored and practiced.
MFT8102Dynamics of Family InteractionThis course examines the theoretical and empirical contributions to the understanding of marital and family systems. The specific focus of the course is on the processes and dynamics of interaction within these relationships. The course will include content on the history of family life, diverse family types, roles and rules in families, family problems and family health, and rituals in family life. Conceptualizations of effective functioning in marriages and families will be studied and various factors that impact marital and family systems will be addressed.
MFT7104Statistical Design for MFT ResearchThis course provides an introductory exploration of statistics for the graduate Learner. It includes instruction on the calculation, use, and interpretation of descriptive statistics, and introduces inferential statistical analysis. The emphasis of this course is on providing a working knowledge of basic statistical concepts to help the Learner understand statistical methodology used in family therapy research, and also more generally, developing a working knowledge of statistical usage in everyday life.
MFT8202Family Therapy with AdolescentsThis course is designed to provide clinically relevant background information, theory, and therapeutic models and interventions for pertinent presenting clinical problems relevant to adolescents. Course material will address family therapy practice and be related conceptually to theory. Specific methods of therapy with adolescents and facilitating parental and family involvement will be discussed. Intervention strategies for difficult adolescents will be discussed, many of which have a common focus on working both within the family and with external systems relevant to the life of the adolescent.
MFT7105Advanced Assessment in MFT Research and Intervention In this course, Learners are trained to administer assessment instruments as an evaluative component of clinical practice and research in marriage and family therapy. Learners will become familiar with the use of a wide variety of assessment instruments and clinical assessment procedures relating to children, individuals, couples, and families. Learners will also identify specific measurement and evaluation tools or methods for potential use in their own dissertation research.
MFT8301Advanced Couple TherapyThis course involves an in depth study of systemic approaches to couple therapy. Topics will focus on assessment methods, empirical research on couple therapy, specific models of couple therapy, integration of course content with personal case work, special problems in couple relationships, and the dynamics of gender and diversity in relation to couple therapy.
MFT7106Quantitative Research Design in MFTThis course provides Learners with the skills essential in the critique and execution of quantitative research methods relating to marriage and family therapy. Course content will cover evaluation and critique of research processes, research problems, research designs, selection of appropriate methods of data collection, data analysis strategies, interpretation of findings, and research/evaluation report writing. Learners will develop a preliminary methodological design for potential use with their envisioned dissertation research.
MFT8115Family Systems Approaches to AddictionThis course provides an overview of family systems approaches to addiction. Course material addresses addiction with respect to etiology, intervention, assessment, diagnosis, and treatment from a family systems perspective. In addition, the course explores how multicultural systemic issues influence family systems approaches to dealing with addictions.
MFT7107Qualitative Research Design in MFTThis Doctoral level course will focus on understanding fundamental assumptions within the qualitative research paradigm, the utility and experience of performing qualitative research inquiry in contemporary family therapy, and exposure to various methods and approaches to data collection within the qualitative paradigm. There is an emphasis on clinical research from a systems perspective and Learners will be expected to take a learning-through-doing/experiential approach. Course activities will develop a Learner’s appreciation of a qualitative research stance, ability to critically review various field methods within qualitative research, and development of qualitative research writing skills via reflexive journals and fieldnotes. Although we will focus primarily on only a few, through readings and experiential activities, Learners will be exposed to a variety of qualitative research methods. These will include Phenomenology, Grounded Theory, Action Research, Performance and Arts-Based Ethnography, Narrative Inquiry, Life Histories/Case Studies, Critical Ethnography, Fieldwork Interviews, Discourse and Conversation Analysis, and Focus Groups. The signature activity of the course is a draft of the Learner’s Methodology dissertation chapter.
MFT8150Family Life EducationThis course is designed to assist Learners in understanding and preparing for certification as a Family Life Educator (CFLE). Course material covers the development and purpose of the designation and the role and profession of CLFEs. Learners will consider the various professional opportunities that are available to CFLEs and prepare and present content that is consistent with the designation.
MFT7108Advanced Data Analysis Strategies in MFTThis course is an intermediate examination of statistical analyses commonly used in the field of marriage and family therapy (MFT). It prepares doctoral MFT Learners with the skills required to plan, conduct (using SPSS), report, and interpret quantitative statistical analyses. Topics include: basic statistical knowledge, probability theory, exploratory date analysis, assumptions for statistical tests, parametric, and nonparametric tests. Specific analyses include: correlation, regression (simple, multiple, and logistic), basic ANOVA, and advanced ANOVA techniques.
MFT7109Planning Dissertation Research in MFTLearners in this course will begin the process of writing a dissertation. The course will address the University dissertation process and aids to successfully completing a dissertation, including self-care and time management.