Abstract
'Get people to think, rather than telling them what to think...enough of that out there already'<br />Prof Claire Grant <br /> <br />Before taking up my current academic post I worked as a clinical psychologist in a community mental health team in inner city London. Partly as a result of that experience, I became aware of the potential for mental health services to do harm as well as good. I also observed how dominant discourses and practices socialise trainee mental health professionals from various disciplines, sometimes appearing to blind them to this potential for harm (Foucault, 1967; Coles, Diamond & Keenan, 2013; Newnes, 1990). I became interested in critical perspectives on psychology and in particular on psychosis (e.g. Pilgrim & Treacher, 1992; Johnstone, 2000; Bentall, 2003) and began writing in this area (e.g. Kinderman & Cooke, 2000; Cooke, 2008). <br /><br />As an academic I am currently active in promoting professional and public debate about ‘taken for granted’ (Barrett, 1996) ideas in mental health (e.g. Cooke & McGowan, 2013; Cooke, Gilchrist & McGowan, 2014; Cooke & Kinderman, in press). My current role at Canterbury Christ Church University, UK includes teaching on a doctoral programme that trains clinical psychologists to work in the British National Health Service. <br /><br />This chapter describes some of the tensions inherent to teaching critical psychology in such a context. It also outlines the ways that colleagues and I have managed these tensions and developed teaching in this area such that the programme’s critical ‘edge’ is now one of the aspects most valued by trainees (Chatfield, 2016).
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | Teaching Critical Psychology: International Perspectives |
| Publisher | Routledge |
| ISBN (Print) | 9781138288348 |
| Publication status | Published - 21 Aug 2017 |
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This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being
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