Clinical Psychology at University of East London - UCAS

Course summary

The Professional Doctorate in Clinical Psychology (DClinPsych) course provides a comprehensive training programme comprising concurrent academic teaching (on average two days per week) and clinical work placements based mainly in the NHS (on average three days per week). The overarching purpose of the training course is to supply highly competent clinical psychologists for the NHS and related settings. Please view the full Trainee Person Specification if you are interested in this course. On successful completion of training, you will meet the Health and Care Professions Council's requirements for registration as a Practitioner Psychologist. You will also satisfy the British Psychological Society's Committee on Training in Clinical Psychology requirements (BPS, CTCP) for becoming a Chartered Psychologist. You will participate in a broad-based clinical-academic programme, designed and taught by a diverse core team, selected invited external speakers, and NHS specialists. The course covers all of the major theoretical and clinical approaches to clinical psychology. This training course requires you to fulfil two main minimum criteria to apply. You need at least a year's experience of paid relevant clinical-academic work, such as an assistant psychologist in the NHS or a research assistant. You need strong academic qualifications, i.e. at least an upper 2:1 degree in psychology (which grants a Graduate Basis for Registration with the BPS). During the training course, you will be robustly assessed to evaluate your clinical performance, academic achievement, and your ability to integrate these two elements. As this is a doctoral-level programme, you will need to be able to work at this standard and produce an original research thesis by the end of training. All applications must be made via the Clearing House for postgraduate courses in clinical psychology, click 'Apply' to find out more.

Modules

Clinical Psychology Theory & Practice 1 90 credits. Main Topics: History and Epistemology of Clinical Psychology Clinical Psychology in Modern Settings and Services Professional Practice & Transferable Skills Social Inequalities & Clinical Psychology Personal & Professional Skills Development Approaches to Assessment & Evaluation Approaches to Formulation & Intervention Approaches to Individual and Direct Work Psychological Problems in Adults and Older Adults Psychosis and Severe/Enduring Presentations Neuropsychological Assessment & Rehabilitation Accessing & Appraising the Evidence Base Clinical Psychology Placements 1 & 2

Assessment method

We accept a wide range of European and international qualifications in addition to A-levels, the International Baccalaureate and BTEC qualifications.

Professional bodies

Professionally accredited courses provide industry-wide recognition of the quality of your qualification.

  • British Psychological Society
  • Health and Care Professions Council

Entry requirements

Bachelor's degree with minimum First Class or Upper Second Class (2:1) (overall grade of 60% or greater) which is acceptable to the British Psychological Society as conferring Graduate Basis for Chartered Membership. Applicants with a conversion diploma/MSc must have a 2:1 class or better in their first degree, and equivalent results or better in the conversion programme. Applicants must have knowledge of data analysis procedures employed within the field of psychology including multivariate statistical and qualitative approaches.


Fees and funding

Tuition fees

No fee information has been provided for this course

Additional fee information

No additional fees or cost information has been supplied for this course, please contact the provider directly.
Clinical Psychology at University of East London - UCAS