Course Syllabus

 

Syllabus 

DIS Logo

images crisis.jpg

Semester & Location:

Spring 2023 - DIS Copenhagen

Type & Credits:

Elective Course - 3 credits

Major Disciplines:

Human Development - Psychology 

Prerequisite:

One psychology course at university level.

Faculty Members:

Terry Saftis

Current Students: please contact your faculty using the canvas inbox function

Time & Place:

Mondays and Thursdays 13.15-14.35

Location: N7-C23

 

Description of Course

We are all likely to experience a traumatic event at some point in our lives. Such experiences affect an individual’s biological, psychological and social functioning. This course will provide students with a theoretical base for understanding how life crises and critical incidents affect every day functioning. Both classical and contemporary theories, and research regarding assessment and treatment of trauma will be covered. Using case descriptions (e.g. Manchester Attacks), students are encouraged to analyze and apply crisis and trauma approaches from an international perspective 

 

Furthermore, Individual differences regarding traumatic events will be explored.  Students will be introduced to the core concepts of preventive interventions, crisis intervention, and management.  Individuals, groups and organizations will be considered. Cultural Implications will be addressed by exploring the European perspective. Finally, this course will address both natural events and contemporary issues leading to crisis and trauma (e.g., natural disasters and terrorism).

 

Learning Objectives

  • Learn about the different types of crisis and trauma.

  • Gain insight into the impact of crisis and trauma on the individual and society.

  • Understand how people and groups react to different kinds of crisis and why.

  • Familiarize themselves with interventions that reduce the intensity of emotional, mental, physical and behavioral reactions to a crisis.

  • Understand prevention techniques to stop the development of chronic crisis reactions

  • Know how to classify and assess different crisis reactions

  • Be aware of how to support people to return to their level of functioning before the crisis.

  • Analyse how professionals and organizations can minimize and manage the consequences of severe psychological stress.

  • Integrate theory and research with assessment and treatment

 

Faculty

Terry has a MSc. in Health Psychology (2000) and a BSc. (Hons) in Psychology (1997) both from City University UK/London. He also has a certificate in psychotherapy and counseling and is in the process of qualifying as a psychoanalyst from the Centre for Freudian Analysis and Research. Terry has co-authored a number of journal articles on post-traumatic stress disorder. 

Before joining DIS Terry Saftis worked as the Clinical Director of Community Housing and Therapy, a leading UK charity running therapeutic community households for adults with mental health diagnoses. He has also managed two therapeutic community projects, one, being a project working with homeless veterans suffering from mental health difficulties and the other a project for individuals with a diagnosis of psychosis and personality disorder.  He has also worked as a psychologist in the Greek Army. With DIS since 2015.

 

Readings

Required Textbook (Availible in DIS Library):

  • Van der Kolk, B.A., McFarlane, A.C.& Weisaeth, L. (Eds.).(2007). Traumatic Stress: The Effect_ of Overwhelming Experience on Mind, Body, and Society” New York: The Guilford Press.

Required Articles and Other Media on Canvas:

  • Adams, E. R., Bocarino, A. J., Figley, R. C., (2006) Compassion Fatigue and Psychological Distress Among Social Workers: A Validation Study. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 76 (1), 103-108.
  • J. & Sloan, D; ( 2012) The Oxford handbook of Traumatic stress. Oxford University Press. Pgs. 347-363
  • Bonanno, G.A. (2004). Loss, trauma, and human resilience: Have we underestimated the human capacity to thrive after extremely aversive events? American Psychologist, 59, 20-28.
  • Cohen, K & Collens, P., (2013) The impact of trauma work on trauma workers: A metasynthesis on vicarious trauma and vicarious posttraumatic growth. Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice and Policy, 5(6), 570-580.
  • Dulmus, N Catherine., & Hilarski, C. (2003) When Stress Constitutes Trauma and Trauma Constitutes Crisis: The Stress-Trauma-Crisis. Brief Treatment and Crisis Intervention 3:27–35.
  • Follette, V., & Ruzek, V. (2006): Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies for trauma. New York: The Guilford Press, Chapter 5. Pgs. 96-116.
  • George S. Everley, Jr., & Jeffrey T. Mitchell. (2000) The debriefing "controversy" and crisis intervention: a review of lexical and substantial issues. International Journal of Mental Health, 2(4), 211-225.
  • Greenberg, N., 2015. Military and Disaster Psychiatry. In: James D. Wright (editor-in-chief), International Encyclopedia of the Social Behavioral Sciences, 2nd edition, Vol 15: 495-500.
  • Herman, J. L., (1992) Complex PTSD: A Syndrome in Survivors of prolonged and Repeated Trauma. Journal of Traumatic Stress, Vol. 5, No. 3, pages 377-391.
  • Jeffrey H. Fox, et al. (2012) Original Research, The Effectiness of Psychological First Aid as a Disaster Intervention Tool: Research Analysis of Peer Reviewed Literature fro 1990-2010. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness., American Medical Association, 6 (3)., pgs 247 – 252.
  • Kenneth, E. Miller & Andrew Rasmussen (2009) War exposure, daily stressors, and mental health in conflict and post conflict settings: Bridging the divide between trauma focuses and psychosocial frameworks. International Journal of Social Science and Medicine, 70, pgs. 7-16.
  • MacManus, Deirdre, et al. (2015) "Aggressive and violent behavior among military personnel deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan: prevalence and link with deployment and combat exposure." Epidemiologic reviews 37.1 196-212.
  • Mayou RA, Ehlers A, Hobbs M. (2000) Psychological debriefing for road traffic accident victims. Three­year follow­up of a randomised controlled trial. British Journal of Psychiatry, 176:589­593.
  • Mc Farlon, A, C., (2000). On the Social Denial of Trauma and the Problem of Knowing the Past. International Handbook of Human Response to Trauma (chapeter, 2). Plenum Publishers, 11-26.
  • Orden, V., A, et al. (2010) The Interpersonal Theory of Suicide. Psychological Review, 17 (2), 575-600.
  • Report by Greenberg Research Inc. The People on War Report. Pgs. 1-37.
  • Resick, P. A. (2009). Stress and Trauma. Clinical Psychology, A Modular Course. Psychology Press. Chapter 1. P. 1-28.
  • Romme & Essher (2012) Psychosis as a Personal Crisis: An experienced-based approach. Routledge, London. Chapters 7,8,9, Pgs. 59-85
  • Schlenger, W.E., et al. (2002). Psychological reactions to terrorist attacks: findings from the national study of Americans reaction to September 2011. The Journal of the American Medical Association, 288 (5), pgs. 581-588.
  • Smith, J. A. (2012). The Stormy Search for Self in Early Adulthood: Developmental Crisis and the Dissolution of Dysfunctional Personae. The Humanistic Psychologist, 2012, 38:2. P. 120-145.
  • Victoroff, J. (2005) The Mind of the Terrorist A review and Critique of Psychological Approaches. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 49(1), 3-42.

Field Studies

Trampoline House

Refugees in Denmark more than ever before need spaces from where to protest the continuous parliamentary and societal

encroachment on their rights.

In the Weekend Trampoline House, asylum seekers, rejected asylum seekers, and refugees with a residence permit can get counseling, develop capacities, find community, and bear witness to the shadowy sides of Danish refugee policy. All under one roof!

The house works to improve refugees and asylum seekers’ legal rights, equality, and participation in Danish society by offering legal counseling and activities and by organizing events and running campaigns, which partly strengthen the users' professional competences, social networks, and democratic participation, and partly throws light on the human consequences of the continuous tightenings of Denmark's immigration policy.

The house is a gathering place for displaced people as well as Danish citizens and international residents, who think that the Danish asylum and refugee policy has become too tight, and who work for a more humane and inclusive refugee policy together.

 

Hope Now 

HopeNow is an independent non-governmental organisation (NGO) with a mandate to combat human trafficking under the Danish Action Plan.

We seek to create positive change and empower victims and survivors of trafficking to a better life. HopeNow is a diverse organisation that relies on volunteers in all spheres, from outreach and fundraising to the administration and the Board. We usually have from 10 to 15 engaged individuals devoting their time to our organisation voluntarily and one full-time paid staff.

About 20% of our team are males, 80% are female and come from different ethnic backgrounds. We regard a multidisciplinary approach as HopeNow’s unique strength in empowering trafficked persons in Denmark. Our interdisciplinary team includes practitioners and academic experts from, e.g. migration, law, anthropology, social policy, social work, trauma therapy, cultural mediation, IT and more.

Guest Lecturers

Olga Ruciman

Olga is a psychologist/psychotherapist which specializes in the area of psychosis. She also deals with symptoms of psychosis herself and has had experiences in psychiatry settings.  She currently leads the hearing voices groups here in Denmark and is a leader in advocating for seeing psychosis beyond symptoms. 

Thomas Kjær - Working with refugee children in Denmark

Thomas has worked as a social worker during the war with Ukraine.  He has been responsible in helping unaccompanied children here in Denmark.  He will be discussing the refugee situation in Denmark and the interventions used by the state. 

Josefine Nymard - Police psychologist 

Josefine Nymand is a licensed psychologist (cand. Psych. aut) specialized in crisis, trauma and police psychology. 

 

Evaluation

Students will be evaluated throughout the term by completing various group and individual assignments.  All students will be assigned their groups in the beginning of the term and will be required to complete all coursework in order to receive a pass grade.  Students that are able to produce work beyond the obvious and predictable will be awarded full marks for their efforts.  Students are also expected to contribute to class discussions and show active participation throughout the term in order to receive full marks for the course. 

Each session will typically start with a 10-15 minutes presentation of the central topic based on the required reading for the day, and related to topics taught in earlier sessions. This will be followed by class discussion in small groups, and followed by yet another 10-15 minute presentation.  In the majority of lessons students will be asked to analyze case studies relating to the material presented on the day. 

Students are expected to be prepared for class and participate actively throughout. This includes participation in all the planned activities and class/group discussions. Students are expected to have completed all required readings and ready to engage with key questions.  Students are not allowed to use computers during class.  

Grading

Assignment

Percent

Participation & Engagement

15%

Student Presentations on Research Article

10%

 Student reflection paper on presentation

20%

Clinical Case Analysis

30%

Poster presentation (DIS Showcase event)

25%

Participation: Class Attendance and Participation (15%):

Attendance in class is mandatory. Students are expected to participate in class, enter into dialogue with fellow students and instructors, and to take part in discussions and presentations.  As part of the participation grade, each student is expected to post a reflection on Canvas, regarding “what I learned today in class today that was interesting and why”. This includes comments on Canvas pertaining to the 2 field studies, and guest lectures

 

Student Presentations of Research Article (10%)

The presentation should include the following:

  • An introduction to the topic and why it is relevant.

  • The main themes of the paper

  • Clinical and practical implications

  • Future contextual considerations

Students should submit their chosen research article one week prior to the presentation.  The article that students will be presenting will be part of the required readings for the class.  All students will need to come with two questions/discussion points regarding the suggested reading that will be discussed in class.

 

Student reflection paper on individual presentation (10%)

Students are required to submit a 5-6-page reflection paper following their individual presentation in relation to the topic they have presented in class.  Students will be required to complete an APA-formatted literature review on the selected topic.  Students are expected to us at least 5 references, 3 of which should be empirical articles.  Students are expected to address the following questions:

  • What is the main topic and current theoretical perspectives

  • Which points of the paper do you agree or disagree with and why?

  • Alternative theoretical/clinical viewpoints in relation to the presentation

  • Controversies in current knowledge and current theoretical gaps

  • Future contextual considerations in relation to the topic presented

 

Clinical Case Analysis (30%)  

Students will be required to write a clinical case analysis of a particular client. More information will be provided on Canvas.

Group Poster Presentation (DIS Showcase) (25%)

Students will be required to develop a psychology service for individuals/groups/communities confronted with crisis and trauma.  It will be required for students to choose a particularly high-risk group and develop a psychology service that will work comprehensively with the specific group they have identified.

Examples and grading rubric are provided under the link assignments. 

 

Disability and Resource Statement  

Any student who has a need for accommodation based on the impact of a disability should contact the Office of Academic Support (acadsupp@dis.dk) to coordinate this.  In order to receive accommodations, students should inform the instructor of approved DIS accommodations within the first two weeks of classes.

 

Policies

Attendance

You are expected to attend all classes, guest lectures, workshops and field studies. If you must miss a class for religious holidays, medical reasons, or other valid reasons, you must let us know as far in advance as possible of the absence and obtain information about the work you must do to keep up in class. If you miss a class for any other reason (sudden illness, family emergency, etc.), you should get in touch with us as soon as possible and arrange to make up the work missed.

It is crucial for your learning that you stay on task and hand in assignments on or before the due date. All work– including in-class projects – have to be completed in order to pass the class. Late papers or projects will be marked down with 1/3 of a grade for each day it is late.

Academic Honesty

Plagiarism and Violating the Rules of an Assignment

DIS expects that students abide by the highest standards of intellectual honesty in all academic work. DIS assumes that all students do their own work and credit all work or thought taken from others.   Academic dishonesty will result in a final course grade of “F” and can result in dismissal. The students’ home universities will be notified. DIS reserves the right to request that written student assignments be turned in electronic form for submission to plagiarism detection software.  See the Academic Handbook for more information, or ask your instructor if you have questions.

Additional Areas

Policy on late papers – This should be at the discretion of the instructor, but it is useful to state this policy (e.g. ‘Late papers will not be accepted’, or ‘Late papers will be accepted, but your grade for the paper will be reduced by half a point for each day that it is late.’)

Use of laptops or phones in class – DIS recommends that you are clear about classroom etiquette and the expectations you have of students using laptops in class. The decision to allow laptop use in class at all is at the discretion of the instructor.

Please make sure to read the Academic Regulations on the DIS website. There you will find regulations on: 

Course Summary:

Date Details Due