At the end of this course, students are able to:
- Analyze and describe various ways in which care professionals and policy makers can handle diversities in specific clinical, educational or policy settings (3, 5)
- Analyze for a case study which aspects of care practices (e.g., perceptions of problem behaviours, disabilities and treatments, kinds of problems, ways of seeking help, treatment needs, communication styles) are influenced in which way by cultural, religious, gender, sexual and social class diversities of client and professional (5)
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During this course, you will gain in-depth insight in how and which diversities such as gender, sexuality, cultural and social-economic background matter in (youth) care. Next to the educational and clinical setting of mental health problems (e.g., disabilities, behavioral problems and/ or learning problems), the policy and societal context will receive specific attention, as not only diagnosis, treatment and care and the effects of their standardization will be discussed, but also prevention and accessibility of our health care system for diverse clients. You will become familiarized with topics like micro-aggression, super diversity, cultural variations in perceptions and presentation of mental problems and culturally sensitive counselling, and universalism/cultural relativism. |
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This course is open to master students Behavioural Sciences (psychology and pedagogy students), master students anthropology/sociology/communication studies and B3 students medicine
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Attention: data of third parties is handled in this course. Is your secured RU-mail linked to your personal email address? Due to the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) you need to (temporarily) turn this off and always password protect documents with sensitive information. |
Given the current situation regarding COVID-19, all information from this course description is expressly subject to change. Future developments in the field of COVID-19 could lead to certain passages no longer corresponding to the descriptions made at the start of the academic year. Therefore, no rights can be derived from the course descriptions.
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