Teaching Christian integration in psychology and counseling: current status and future directions.
Garzon, Fernando L. ; Hall, M. Elizabeth Lewis
In this article, we review the current status of theory and
research on teaching Christian integration in psychology and counseling.
Changes in student characteristics, emerging technologies, and paradigm
shifts in the disciplines themselves predict unique opportunities and
challenges for the future. We reflect upon directions integration
learning theory and pedagogy should take in light of these
considerations.
For over 40 years, evangelical Christian psychology and counseling
programs have focused on how to integrate faith and psychology. Numerous
models describe the relationship between Christianity and psychology
(see examples in Entwistle, 2010). Likewise, sophisticated treatment
models have emerged (e.g., Coe & Hall, 2010). This wealth of
knowledge stands in contrast to the dearth of models focused on how
students actually learn integration. Accordingly, we examine the current
status and future directions of teaching integration. We consider the
present theories, research, opportunities, and challenges involved.
Finally, we ponder the future directions integration pedagogy should
take.
Current Theories
Randall Sorenson proposed the lone well-articulated theory of how
students learn integration (Sorenson, Derflinger, Bufford, & McMinn,
2004). He developed his ideas from Bowlby's attachment theory
(e.g., Bowlby, 1988). Briefly, attachment theory focuses on how the
quality of a person's relational bonds, beginning in infancy,
impacts intimacy, relational satisfaction, and emotional health
throughout life. For growing infants, the parent's task is to
become a secure base from which to explore the environment and a safe
haven for comfort and soothing. People continue to need significant
attachment bonds throughout life in order to adapt, grow, and maintain
psychological health. Many attachment figures are important across the
life span (e.g., parents, siblings, peers, spouses).
In essence, Sorenson proposed that attachment principles relate not
only to emotional health, but also to student learning of integration
theory and applied skills. He hypothesized that the quality of student
attachment with professors serves as the primary mediating pathway that
permits meaningful integration learning to occur (Sorenson, Derflinger,
Bufford, & McMinn, 2004). If professors want their conceptual
integration models to "stick', they must have a relationship
with students. Students need to sense the professor's on-going
personal relationship with God. While the instructor's Christian
worldview certainly impacts the quality of course content, Sorenson
proposed that only limited integration learning will take place without
attachment.
Psychology and counseling programs contain enormous potential for
attachment to occur. Faculty serve as instructors, mentors, clinical
supervisors, and chairpersons for students' dissertations. Faculty
holistically model integration on a personal as well as professional
level. In positive relationships, students seek out professors for
prayer, support, and to address questions outside of psychology. When
effective, faculty-student relationships promote a "secure
base" for students in which they can "explore the integration
environment," asking hard questions and thoughtfully examining the
various models proposed. If students have doubts or struggles, faculty
can serve as a "safe haven" for support and encouragement.
Sorenson posited that students need at least one meaningful attachment
to a professor.
Current Research
A small literature exists on the teaching of integration in
psychology and counseling. Only study findings specifically focused on
the teaching of integration will be reported here.
Research on Faculty
Sorenson conducted a series of four studies in graduate schools of
psychology. The first (1994) confirmed the importance of attachment
relationships in the integration process, finding that students'
therapists had a greater influence than professors. A second study
(1997) focusing more explicitly on the role of faculty found that
"evidence of a professor's ongoing process in a personal
relationship with God is the single most important dimension that
accounts for what students found helpful for their own integration of
clinical psychology and faith" (p. 541). Two other studies
replicated this key finding with different graduate clinical psychology
populations (Sorenson et al., 2004; Staton, Sorenson, & Vande Kemp,
1998).
The professor's personality characteristics mattered as well.
Sorenson's research repeatedly found two factors as being
beneficial. Each took the form of a continuum. The first involved
attachment to instructors who served as a "bulwark of the
faith" (keeping the traditions of the faith, being people of
integrity and pious) on one end and those who exemplified the role of
"fellow sojourner" (questioning precepts, struggling with
experiences, changing perspectives across time) on the other. A second
attachment factor related to perceiving the professor as
"emotionally transparent". Some students attached to an
emotionally transparent and interpersonally open faculty member. In
contrast, other students found the role boundary between faculty and
student important for attachment to take place.
Sites, Garzon, Milacci, and Boothe (2009) further explored the
personal characteristics of faculty in a phenomenological study of eight
professors identified by students as exemplars in teaching
integratively. Major themes emphasized the inseparability of
professors' faith from practice, and the outworking of their faith
into their pedagogy and their relationships. Reflecting Sorenson's
emphasis on the spiritual life of the faculty, this study highlights the
connection between each professor's ontological foundation for
integration, and how it is displayed, both in course content and in
relationships with students. In a similar investigation at another
institution, Matthias (2008) conducted a qualitative study of seven
exemplary faculty members. The results echoed Sites et al.'s
findings and also found humility to be an important professorial trait.
Research on Institutional Environment
Ripley, Garzon, Hall, Mangis, and Murphy (2009) extended
Sorenson's research in two ways. First, they found evidence for
Sorenson's attachment model for graduate students in academic
disciplines other than psychology. Further, they found that the
institutional environment played an important additional role in
facilitating integration. Environmental factors such as university-based
and classroom spiritual formation and religious practices were
significant in predicting the importance of integration to students.
In a qualitative component of the same study, Hall, Ripley, Garzon,
and Mangis (2009) found that factors having to do with the professors
(self-revealing, caring, welcoming, dedicated, and open-minded), with
the curriculum (intentionality, balance between general and special
revelation, presence of diverse opinions on integration, pervasiveness
of integration), and with the institutional climate (a context of
"no barriers" between Christianity and academics, corporate
expressions of Christianity, sense of community) were helpful in
learning integration. In addition to confirming the personal
characteristics of professors necessary for attachment relationships to
occur, these findings highlight the creation of a learning climate that
similarly welcomes relational connections and the open and pervasive
expression of lived experiences of faith.
Research on Pedagogy
At the broadest curricular level, Koch and Doughty (1998)
demonstrated in a mixed-methods study that integration can be taught
across the psychology curriculum through four levels of integration.
These include personal integration, discussion of psychological and
Christian themes, reading sources that specifically relate Christianity
and psychology, and experiencing content with a specific focus on
integrating Christian and psychological themes.
Stevenson and Young (1995) examined the characteristics of
integration-specific courses at Christian institutions of higher
education. They found that most universities had one or more courses
dedicated to integration; however, these courses widely varied in
content. The authors concluded by wondering if "the lack of
guidelines, boundaries, and a clear set of core concepts have
discouraged the newcomer and the veteran" (p. 258).
At the most specific curricular level, Burton and Nwosu (2005) and
Lawrence, Burton, and Nwosu (2005) advocated for a pedagogical approach
that fosters "the design and implementation of specific teaching
and learning activities to facilitate student integration of faith and
learning" (Burton & Nwosu, p. 107). Using a mixed-methods
approach, they found that students placed a greater emphasis on teaching
and learning processes than on any other category of response,
preferring active involvement and interaction with peers as key
elements. These findings are consistent with an attachment perspective,
as active teaching and learning strategies provide greater opportunities
than traditional lectures for faculty-student connections and for active
connections to lived experiences. The presence of an accepting classroom
environment, and, as Sorenson would predict, the professor's
"caring attitude" and "exemplary life" were also
important.
Research Conclusions
These studies indicate that the Christian university environment as
a whole can either promote or impede the teaching of integration. The
broader climate must facilitate a sense of openness, safety, and valuing
of the integrative process. The entire curriculum (including traditional
courses as well as integration-specific courses), pedagogical
strategies, and the person of the professor all play critical roles in
integration teaching and learning.
Opportunities and Challenges
Teaching integration has changed, in part because the world has
changed. First, we consider how alterations in the student population
impact integration's future. Next, we reflect on transformations in
the academic world.
Different Student Characteristics
The student population has changed in faith characteristics,
demographics, and worldview. Barna surveys (e.g., 2005) suggest that
Christians as a whole are much less theologically and doctrinally sound
than in previous generations. Public schools and the media have promoted
a postmodern worldview. Taken together, the central Christian truths may
strike today's students as narrow-minded. Apologetics and basic
theology therefore may need to be incorporated more into integration
curriculum, and students may benefit from the attachment-based modeling
of professors who live out orthodox faith in a postmodern environment.
Increasing numbers of students come from divorced, single-parent,
or blended family households. More students are older and changing
careers. The integration task thus may need to expand to include more
emotional support, something quite consistent with Sorenson's
ideas.
Academic Transformations
The fields of psychology and counseling have experienced a
technological revolution while simultaneously undergoing a number of
paradigm shifts. Do such changes necessitate new teaching practices?
Technology. Technology opens a new world for teaching integration.
Internet resources like You Tube, Second Life (Academic version only),
and high quality mental health websites enhance opportunities for
pedagogical creativity. We can even "Skype" prominent
integration guest speakers into our classes. Without exploring new
technologies in our teaching, students so used to these resources may
see our methods as antiquated. Indeed, hybrid integration programs that
combine online and residential learning formats are growing rapidly.
Likewise, students live in the new relational world of Facebook,
Twitter, and other social networking sites. These resources present
additional potential avenues for developing the attachment promoted by
Sorenson's theory. Ethical aspects, of course, must carefully be
considered.
Paradigm shifts. Important changes have occurred in psychology.
Without thorough examination of these alterations, students may either
conform to or reject disciplinary perspectives without true integrative
reflection. Three current emphases include the reexamination of
psychological research methods, advances in neuroscience, and the
increasing popularity of evolutionary psychology.
Psychology and counseling have changed epistemologically. A
diversity of approaches and research methodologies have replaced the
logical positivism inherited from the natural sciences. Contemporary
critiques, often influenced by postmodernism, have highlighted how
worldview assumptions and cultural values impact research methodologies.
From a Christian perspective, several authors (e.g., Hall, 2004) have
called for methodologies more consistent with Christian assumptions
about the nature of personhood. The implications for the teaching of
integration in psychology and counseling are clear: we must become
conversant with issues of philosophy of science to evaluate the role of
research methodologies in integration.
An explosion of knowledge about how the brain and neurological
systems contribute to psychological functioning has also occurred. This
has revived interest in the mind-body problem. Thus, Christian scholars
are reexamining the monism vs. dualism debate, with integrationists
proposing a range of models along the monist-dualist spectrum (e.g.,
Murphy, 2006).
Evolutionary psychology represents another paradigm shift. This
naturalistic anthropology stands in stark contrast with Christian
accounts of personhood. In order to prepare students to effectively
function in the larger secular field, therefore, our integrative
teaching must address this contemporary trend in a sophisticated manner.
Clearly, both neuroscience and evolutionary psychology provide fertile
ground for exploring worldview issues such as ontology, anthropology,
and epistemology.
In another shift, psychology and counseling now acknowledge the
importance of spirituality as a dimension of culturally sensitive
treatment. In part as a response, integration programs have incorporated
more training in Christian spiritual formation as a component of
graduate education. This aspect is often intensely experiential,
designed to deepen students' relationship with God while
simultaneously informing them of potential practices with clients. The
courses often take place in retreats or weekend classes. Elements
commonly include experience with spiritual disciplines such as
meditation on Scripture, solitude, silence, worship, contemplative
prayer, Bible study, and corporate celebration combined with readings
from classic and contemporary spiritual formation authors. This emphasis
brings to the table the possibility of working with students'
attachment to God.
This promising addition to traditional integration curriculum also
contains some challenges. We noted previously the postmodern,
doctrinally limited mindset of many young students. Integration programs
therefore are tasked with keeping the above spiritual formation
activities firmly planted in the context of sound evangelical Christian
theology and doctrine. Without such clear moorings, these
classes/retreats could easily encourage individualistic, new age, or
eastern mystical faith instead of a deepened relationship with Jesus
Christ.
Future Directions
Amidst the opportunities and challenges, several key directions
will impact teaching integration in the future. These include advancing
the development of integration learning theory, increasing applied
integration resources in subject-specific areas, considering integration
in secular university settings, and exploring how to use the latest
technologies to foster attachment-based integration learning in online
and hybrid teaching environments.
Sorenson's theory focuses on the impact of the interpersonal
relationship between the professor and student in integration learning;
however, the role of spiritual formation experiences while attending
integration schools is just starting to be considered (e.g., Coe &
Hall, 2010). Similarly, the role of cultural diversity in developing the
attachments essential in integration learning has yet to be examined.
More work is needed in these important areas.
A continued need exists to move beyond model-building to detailed
integration focus in specific psychological subject matter areas as well
as to consider how integration is being taught between Christian
professors and Christian students in secular university environments.
The resources on teaching integration in many subject areas and in the
secular setting are nonexistent, limited, or quite dated.
Similarly, online and hybrid programs have expanded the integration
pedagogy domain, but resources for teaching integration in these
environments are virtually nonexistent. One key question is this: how
does one foster the attachment between professors and students so
critical for genuine integration learning to take place in the online
and hybrid environments? Cultivating mentor relationships at a distance
appears challenging. Research must explore this area.
Indeed, the breadth of topics covered in this article attests to
the fertile areas for research in the subject of teaching integration.
It is our hope that we have spurred instructors and researchers alike in
the quest for further knowledge in integration pedagogy and learning.
Our students can only benefit from these endeavors.
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Correspondence regarding this article may be sent to: Dr. Fernando
Garzon, Liberty University; Center for Counseling and Family Studies,
1971 University Blvd, Lynchburg, VA 24502.
Fernando L. Garzon
Liberty University
M. Elizabeth Lewis Hall
Biola University
Author Information
GARZON, FERNANDO, L. Address: Center for Counseling and Family
Studies, 1971 University Blvd, Lynchburg, VA 24502. Title: Professor in
the Center for Counseling and Family Studies at Liberty University, a
licensed psychologist, and the Chair of Liberty's Institutional
Review Board. Degree: PsyD. Areas of specialization: Dr. Garzon's
research interests focus on integration pedagogy, spiritual
interventions in psychotherapy, lay Christian counseling approaches, and
multicultural issues.
HALL, M. ELIZABETH, L. Address: Rosemead School of Psychology,
Biola University, 13800 Biola Ave., La Mirada, CA 90639. Title:
Associate Professor of Psychology. Degree: Ph.D., Clinical Psychology,
Biola University. Areas of specialization: Women's Issues, Missions
and Mental Health, Integration of Psychology and Theology.