This course is ideal for students working primarily as instrumentalists, composers or conductors and is structured around the needs of the professional performing musician.
This new, innovative skills focused course has been designed to equip practitioners with the knowledge and competence to work collaboratively with service users with a serious mental health problem, using evidence-based interventions.
Why choose this course
On completion of the course you will be able to:
The MSc comprises of 180 academic credits at Level 7. The flexible nature of this course means you can choose an acute or longer term focus to your studies, making it relevant to the practice area you work in.
The course is delivered by a practicing and highly experienced Mental Health Lecturer Practitioner, ensuring clear integration of theory to contemporary practice. The design of this course allows you to work in your own clinical area and enhance and develop your clinical competence through supervised work with mental health service users and families/carers.
You will:
Hold a first degree.
Be a mental health practitioner, in current employment in the UK – you must have access to and be working with service-users who have experience of psychosis and psychosis-related problems for the duration of the course.
http://www.uwl.ac.uk/international/fees-and-scholarships/postgraduate-fees
On successful completion of the course practitioners report an increase in knowledge, clinical expertise and confidence in providing a range of evidence-based interventions. The range of interventions covered during the course will enable you to work in a variety of services accessed by mental health service users.
MSc (180 credits at Level 7):
The University of West London (UWL) offers a diverse range of postgraduate courses, with options to study full-time and part-time, both in daytimes an...