Medical Family Therapy, Ph.D.
91Å®Éñ's doctoral program in medical family therapy prepares students to work within an integrated health care setting in collaboration with medical and mental health professionals. 91Å®Éñ coursework focuses on theory, practice and research in the field of couple and family therapy, emphasizing intervention in primary care medical settings and as adjunct health providers in specialty care.
Curriculum Overview
The doctoral program involves a minimum of 51 credits of coursework beyond the master's degree, plus comprehensive examinations and original research culminating in the dissertation (12 credits). The Ph.D. has a clinical component in which students will be trained in mental health and medical settings as part of an integrated care team of health professionals. Students are required to complete a nine-to-twelve-month internship.
View More About the MFT Ph.D.Ìý
Fieldwork and Research Opportunities
Graduate students perform research projects by working with a faculty mentor whose research interests match their own. Doctoral students are expected to publish and present a minimum of two research projects.
Careers
Possible careers in medical family therapy include:
- Academic positions
- Research positions
- Clinical positions in medical and mental health centers
- Private practice and consulting
Admission Requirements
A master's degree with a marriage and family therapy program accredited by the Commission on Accreditation for Marriage and Family Therapy Education (COAMFTE) or a related mental health area with coursework equivalent to a COAMFTE-accredited program.
Application Requirements
- Online application and fee
- Transcript(s)
- Three letters of recommendation
- GRE scores
- ¸éé²õ³Ü³¾Ã©
- Interview
- Professional goal statement
- Scholarship sample (e.g., thesis, manuscript, journal article)
Requirements for International Students
All admission policies and requirements for domestic students apply to international students. International students must also meet the following additional requirements:
- ¶Ù±ð³¾´Ç²Ô²õ³Ù°ù²¹³Ù±ðÌýEnglish Language Proficiency
- Academic records, in English translation, of students who have undertaken postsecondary studies outside the United States must include:
- Courses taken and/or lectures attended
- Practical laboratory work
- The maximum and minimum grades attainable
- The grades earned or the results of all end-of-term examinations
- Any honors or degrees received.
- WES and ECE transcripts are accepted.
- In order to be issued an I-20 for your F-1 visa application, students must submit financial documents. Proof of financial support that must include:
- A letter of financial support from the person(s) or sponsoring agency funding the student's time at 91Å®Éñ
- A letter from the sponsor's bank verifying that the funds are available and will be so for the duration of the student's study at the University
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Tuition | Cost Per Credit |
---|---|
Graduate Tuition | $1,370 |
Additional charges may apply. Other resources are listed below:
- Graduates will be able to demonstrate an expanded knowledge of theoretical and clinical practice in MFT, medical family therapy and integrative care.
- Graduates will be able to demonstrate advanced competency in clinical practice. Sub-objectives:
- Admission, assessment and diagnosis
- Treatment planning and case management
- Therapeutic interventions
- Legal issues, ethics and standards
- Use of supervision and practicum
- Social justice issues and self-awareness
- Graduates will be able to demonstrate competency in a student-selected area of clinical specialization or expertise.
- Graduates will be able to extend the knowledge base of MFT through original research and intellectual inquiry.
- Graduates will be able to contribute to the field through the development of effective teaching skills.
- Graduates will be able to attain basic competency in providing clinical supervision.
- Graduates will be able to attain an increased cultural competence in working with diverse populations.
- Graduates will be able to demonstrate personal and professional skills that promote social justice through involvement and leadership in their communities.
- Graduates will be able to effectively communicate their values and demonstrate how they guide their personal and professional lives.
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6140 | Interpretive Phenomenology | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6500 | The Neurobiology of Interpersonal Behavior | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6690 | Supervision in Family Therapy | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6720 | Integrative Care Practicum (taken over multiple semesters) | 9 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6730 | Research Practicum (taken over multiple semesters for 4 credits) | 1 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6740 | Theories and Models of Medical Family Therapy | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6750 | Practicum: Supervision of Marriage and Family Therapists | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6760 | Families, Health, and Illness | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6770 | Behavioral Medicine and Integrative Care | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6795 | Community Health and Health Policy | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6825 | Teaching Skills in Medicine | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6830 | Couple and Family Research in Healthcare | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6870 | Clinical Supervision (Advanced) (taken over multiple semesters) | 2 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6910 | Doctoral Internship | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6970 | Research Topics in Medical Family Therapy | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6990 | Dissertation Research (taken over multiple semesters, 12hrs total) | 0-6 |
Research Elective | 3 | |
Total Credits | 66 |
Non-Course Requirements
Qualifying Examination and Defense
After completing a certain number of courses, the student must prepare for and successfully pass the doctoral qualifying examination.
Doctoral Qualifying Examination
The qualifying exam is a written examination. The written test shall occur over a five-day period (excluding weekends). The committee will request the faculty to submit questions on: material covered in any of the coursework completed by the student to date, research papers or reviews that will be provided to the student, and/or philosophical matters related to the history of medical family therapy.
The committee will review the submitted questions and questions will be selected or created by the committee to ensure the questions are fair and appropriate, that they test the student’s knowledge base, and that they help evaluate the problem-solving skills of the student. Failing the qualifying exam will result in the student being recommended to being dropped from the Ph.D. program. In this case, the director can elect to offer the failed student the option of completing a terminal master’s degree.
Once the student has passed the doctoral qualifying examination, the student must register for Dissertation Research. A minimum of 12 credits are required for degree completion and typically occurs over two to three academic years. Initially, the student must identify a research project under the guidance of a faculty member. A Ph.D. dissertation committee will then be formed as the student prepares their research proposal.
A three-member Ph.D. dissertation committee, chaired by the student’s primary adviser, will be appointed by the director. The committee must include at least two members of the medical family therapy graduate faculty. A third member of the committee can be appointed by the graduate program director if they are graduate faculty in other departments or at another university. It is the decision of the graduate program director to accept the adviser’s recommendation and to identify the final member of the committee. Once the proposal has been approved by the Ph.D. dissertation committee it is then submitted to the Office of Graduate Education.
Doctoral Oral Qualifying Examination
The oral qualifying exam will be scheduled after the student has submitted a detailed dissertation research proposal, conducted preliminary experiments to substantiate the proposal and the dissertation advisory committee formed. The committee will consist of five members of the graduate faculty and will be approved by the program director. The oral exam will be public and designed to test the student’s fundamental knowledge of their proposed studies, background for the studies, and critical analysis and thinking.
Prior to the doctoral student’s request for consideration for advancement to candidacy, submission of their research proposal, formation of their research committee, initiation of the major components of their proposed doctoral research project, and registration for any research credits, the student must have completed most of their required core or elective coursework and successfully passed their preliminary/written qualifying exam.
Advancement to Candidacy
Completion of the dissertation research project entails the following: writing of the thesis, application for advancement to candidacy and the dissertation defense. It shall be the responsibility of the student to initiate their candidacy by filling out a candidacy form through the Office of Graduate Education. The completed form must be returned by the deadline stated in the graduate education calendar of deadlines. Once the completed candidacy form has been processed by the Office of Graduate Education, the thesis committee chair will receive ballots for the oral defense of the thesis. The ballots are distributed to the other committee members by the thesis committee chair when they vote on the oral defense. Once the ballots are completed, signed and sealed, it is the committee chairperson's responsibility to deliver the ballots to the Office of Graduate Education immediately following the defense.
Dissertation Defense
The defense of the dissertation provides an opportunity for the student to formally present their findings to their committee, the faculty and students, and to any family member or anyone from the general public wishing to attend. Two weeks before the dissertation defense, an electronic and print announcement of the date, time, location and title of the defense will be publicized to the 91Å®Éñ community. The dissertation defense is two parts. First, the student will make an oral, PowerPoint presentation of no longer than 45 minutes duration where they present their research. Following the presentation, questions from the collective audience will be encouraged.
Once all questions have been satisfactorily answered by the student, the audience is excused and the closed, or executive, part of the defense takes place with only the student and their committee present. The dissertation committee can ask detailed questions and expect the student to demonstrate a thorough knowledge of their project and related research. Questions on general topics in medical family therapy, unrelated to their research, may also be asked. Following all questioning, the student is excused from the room and the committee members, without discussion, complete the defense ballot.
Continuation Standards
Students must maintain a cumulative grade point average (GPA) of 3.00 in all graduate/professional courses.
Roadmaps are recommended semester-by-semester plans of study for programs and assume full-time enrollmentÌýunless otherwise noted. Ìý
Courses and milestones designated as critical (marked with !) must be completed in the semester listed to ensure a timely graduation. Transfer credit may change the roadmap.
This roadmap should not be used in the place of regular academic advising appointments. All students are encouraged to meet with their advisor/mentor each semester. Requirements, course availability and sequencing are subject to change.
Year One | ||
---|---|---|
Fall | Credits | |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6720 | Integrative Care Practicum | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6730 | Research Practicum | 1 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6740 | Theories and Models of Medical Family Therapy | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6760 | Families, Health, and Illness | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6830 | Couple and Family Research in Healthcare | 3 |
Ìý | Credits | 13 |
Spring | ||
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6500 | The Neurobiology of Interpersonal Behavior | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6720 | Integrative Care Practicum | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6730 | Research Practicum | 1 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6970 | Advanced Research Topics in Medical Family Therapy | 3 |
Ìý | Credits | 10 |
Summer | ||
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6720 | Integrative Care Practicum | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6770 | Behavioral Medicine and Integrative Care | 3 |
Ìý | Credits | 6 |
Year Two | ||
Fall | ||
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6690 | Supervision in Family Therapy | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6730 | Research Practicum | 1 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6870 | Clinical Supervision (Advanced) | 1 |
Research Elective | 3 | |
Ìý | Credits | 8 |
Spring | ||
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6140 | Interpretive Phenomenology | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6730 | Research Practicum | 1 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6750 | Practicum: Supervision of Marriage and Family Therapists | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6825 | Teaching Skills in Medicine | 3 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6870 | Clinical Supervision (Advanced) | 1 |
Ìý | Credits | 11 |
Summer | ||
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6910 | Doctoral Internship | 1 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6990 | Dissertation Research | 4 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6795 | Community Health and Health Policy | 3 |
Ìý | Credits | 8 |
Year Three | ||
Fall | ||
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6910 | Doctoral Internship | 1 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6990 | Dissertation Research | 4 |
Ìý | Credits | 5 |
Spring | ||
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6910 | Doctoral Internship | 1 |
²Ñ¹ó°ÕÌý6990 | Dissertation Research | 4 |
Ìý | Credits | 5 |
Ìý | Total Credits | 66 |