2017
DOI: 10.1002/anzf.1195
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Integrating Spirituality in Marriage and Family Therapy Training

Abstract: Interest is growing in how to integrate spirituality into family therapy. Closely related to this development are efforts to include spirituality in marriage and family therapy training. Students in various fields are expressing interest in spirituality and the desire to have it integrated into their training programs. However, not all family therapy training incorporates spirituality as part of rigorous academic inquiry while considering the personal and cultural components of spirituality in the curriculum. … Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…(Table 2 notes the items falling in each of these subcategories as well as their median scores and IQRs.) These findings expand upon extant literature highlighting how specific MFT programs integrate matters of Christian faith into their curricula (i.e., Coyle, 2017; Grauf-Grounds et al, 2009) as well as upon related literature from clinical psychology, which notes the importance of including integration-based subject matter into program curricula but does not detail what particular topics ought to be incorporated (Lewis Hall et al, 2009).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 62%
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“…(Table 2 notes the items falling in each of these subcategories as well as their median scores and IQRs.) These findings expand upon extant literature highlighting how specific MFT programs integrate matters of Christian faith into their curricula (i.e., Coyle, 2017; Grauf-Grounds et al, 2009) as well as upon related literature from clinical psychology, which notes the importance of including integration-based subject matter into program curricula but does not detail what particular topics ought to be incorporated (Lewis Hall et al, 2009).…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 62%
“…These items echo other faith-based integration literature suggesting that student engagement in personal reflections and development of self-understanding facilitates integrative learning (Flanagan et al, 2013; Johnson, 2019). They also echo secular literature related to the integration of R/S in MFT which suggests that family therapists learn to reflect critically on their own R/S as a precursor to being able to ethically integrate matters of faith with their therapeutic practice (Coyle, 2017; Carlson, Erickson, et al, 2002). Taken together, these results underscore the importance of training MFT students to consider their family backgrounds, life experiences, and Christian faith-based beliefs as a means by which they can develop more robust understandings of what it might look like for them to integrate their faith in the context of family therapy.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 64%
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“…The integration of models in counseling can help counselors treat their clients with better strategies and interventions (Lebow, 1997). There are programs for training integrative counselors; however, integrative counseling is a movement within the general practice of psychotherapy; therefore, any professional psychotherapist can practice an integrative approach (Coyle, 2017). The counselor’s method of integrating approaches depends on their individual education, training, and clinical skills (Coyle, 2017).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many MFT programs are based in religiously‐affiliated institutions and explicitly integrate spiritual values into their training, such as Brigham Young University (Latter‐day Saints), Fuller Theological Seminary (Evangelical), and Seattle University (Jesuit Catholic). In addition, MFT programs have presented their overall mission and example course activities that integrate spirituality into their training approach (Coyle, ; Grauf‐Grounds, Edwards, Macdonald, Quek, & Sellers, ). However, while spirituality is discussed in MFT training literature, very little research has been conducted evaluating the effects of a spiritual integration course on MFT students.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%