KU News: KU students open positive psychotherapy clinic, provide more than 800 hours of counseling services

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KU students open positive psychotherapy clinic, provide more than 800 hours of counseling services
LAWRENCE — Six weeks before the Positive Psychotherapy Clinic was set to open on the University of Kansas Lawrence campus, the COVID-19 pandemic forced everyone to work and learn from home. But that temporary delay enabled the clinic to reach far beyond campus and provide hundreds of hours of free counseling services to clients across Kansas.

Architecture & Design dean candidate Mahbub Rashid to present Feb. 24
LAWRENCE – The final candidate for the University of Kansas School of Architecture & Design dean position will give his public presentation from 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. Feb. 24 in The Forum at Marvin Hall. Mahbub Rashid, KU professor of architecture and interim dean for the school, will present publicly on his approach to leadership, how he emphasizes design thinking and his insights on the key areas of emphasis for the school over the next five years.

Full stories below.

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Contact: Mike Krings, KU News Service, 785-864-8860, [email protected], @MikeKrings
KU students open positive psychotherapy clinic, provide more than 800 hours of counseling services
LAWRENCE — Shortly before the Positive Psychotherapy Clinic was set to open on the University of Kansas Lawrence campus, the COVID-19 pandemic forced everyone to work and learn from home. But that temporary delay enabled the clinic to reach far beyond campus and provide hundreds of hours of free counseling services to people across the state who never would have been able to make it to KU before. The clinic now has a new group of graduate students about to provide counseling to Kansans for a number of concerns, all while focusing on what is right in people’s lives.

KU’s counseling psychology program in the School of Education & Human Sciences has long required students to start seeing clients in their second year. Brian Cole, associate professor of educational psychology and director of training in the doctoral program, said there were plans to open a clinic to see clients in the school’s building in Lawrence, about six weeks before the pandemic upended everyone’s lives. Even though services are opening back up, there are no plans to go back. A HIPAA-compliant telehealth format has proven to have a far broader reach than eastern Kansas and enable students and faculty to serve far more people. So far, the clinic has provided more than 800 hours of services to people across Kansas.

Students in the counseling psychology master’s program are required to complete 240 hours of service, which will soon rise to 280. The program helps allow students to complete required training without adding another year of schooling.

“I started thinking of this clinic as a way to get more hours for our students while providing a service to the state. We do the traditional therapy, but the way we approach treatment is a bit different,” Cole said. “The idea of positive psychotherapy is there is more to life than being symptom-free. It’s not about living in neutral.”

Traditional psychotherapy focuses on treating symptoms. For example, if a person was experiencing depression rating at a negative six — meaning they had significant symptoms but were still able to make it through the average day — the goal might be to get them to a zero, meaning they did not experience symptoms, but they were not thriving or making positive gains either. Positive psychotherapy works with clients to focus on their strengths, what they do well, what is going well in their lives and use those positive factors to set goals, work toward them and use strengths to address areas of concern.

Students in the program have provided services for people dealing with pandemic-related stress as well as traditional concerns like depression, anxiety, relationship issues such as divorce, academic stress and related areas. And KU’s Positive Psychotherapy Clinic, among the first of its kind in the nation, has proven to be effective: Evaluation of clients has shown that about 70% have made significant progress in their eight-week program, well above the traditional average, Cole said.

Clients who live as far away as Garden City, some 350 miles from Lawrence, check in weekly to gauge progress. At the completion of the program, counselors can make referrals to other therapists if clients would like them and also plan a one-month follow-up. About 50 graduate students have taken part in the program so far, and an additional 15 will provide assistance as the clinic renews services this month. Anyone interested in taking part can inquire at the clinic’s website. Clients must be an adult living in Kansas.

KU has long been a leader in positive psychology and its application in positive psychotherapy. The late Rick Snyder was a pioneer in the area, and one of his mentees, the late Shane Lopez, were both KU faculty members and highly respected in the field. For his part in launching the Positive Psychotherapy Clinic as well as research and service in the field, Cole recently was awarded the American Psychological Association Society for Counseling Shane J. Lopez Award for Professional Contributions in Positive Psychology.

“It means a lot, especially being named for my mentor,” Cole said of the award. “I learned about hope therapy, counseling psychology and so much more from Shane here at KU. Things have come full circle in a lot of ways.”
Cole, who leads the clinic with Kristen Hensley, associate professor of the practice and training director of the counseling psychology master’s program, said the clinic is entirely grant-funded. The hope is to work with university and community partners to secure permanent funding in order to meet the need for counseling and mental health services across the state.

The students who are now learning about positive psychology and positive psychotherapy have taken the practice into their professional careers in VA hospitals, college counseling centers, private practices and other areas. Recent graduates often have training their supervisors have not received and are able to establish the practice in their places of work.

Meanwhile, on KU’s campus, counseling psychology students will continue to reach out across the state.

“Focusing on what is right with people can be a meaningful way to reduce stress and suffering,” Cole said. “A lot of people don’t have the money, time or transportation to get to therapy, and we’ve been able to eliminate a lot of barriers and help people we never would have been able to before. There’s a ton of need out there. And while this was all very new two years ago, now it’s commonplace in almost every practice site. One thing the pandemic has shown is telehealth is effective and it’s here to stay.”
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Contact: Evan Riggs, Office of the Provost, 785-864-1085, [email protected], @KUProvost
Architecture & Design dean candidate Mahbub Rashid to present Feb. 24
LAWRENCE – The final candidate for the University of Kansas School of Architecture & Design dean position will give his public presentation from 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. Feb. 24 in The Forum at Marvin Hall. Mahbub Rashid will present publicly on his approach to leadership, how he emphasizes design thinking and his insights on the key areas of emphasis for the school over the next five years.

A livestream of Rashid’s presentation will be available here, and the passcode is 387242.

Rashid is a tenured full professor in the KU School of Architecture & Design. He currently serves as the interim dean of the school, a position he’s held since 2019. He has also served as the associate dean for research and graduate studies since 2014 and director of the master’s and doctoral programs since 2008. Rashid joined the faculty at KU as an associate professor of design in 2005 and rose to his current rank of professor of architecture in 2011. During the 2018-19 school year, he was named a KU Senior Administrative Fellow, a distinction given to a small group of faculty members each year.

Rashid came to KU from the Georgia Institute of Technology, where he earned his doctorate. Rashid spent his final three years at Georgia Tech as a research scientist in the College of Architecture. In 2005, Rashid was awarded the Faculty Research Integration Award at Georgia Tech.

Rashid earned his Bachelor of Arts in Architecture from the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology. With a Master of Science in Architectural Studies from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a doctorate in architecture from Georgia Tech, he is an expert in theories and methods of architectural research with a focus on the structures of built form and space.

Rashid uses an innovative spatial and social network, fractal and statistical analysis along with more traditional research methods and methodologies to study the effects of build form and space on human behavior, psychology, society and culture in the office, health care and urban environments.
Registered as an architect in Georgia, Rashid also works as an architectural consultant for architectural design firms. He is a nationally known expert on intensive care unit (ICU) design and evidence-based health care design.
Rashid has more than 90 peer-reviewed publications, and his second book, “Physical Space and Spatiality in Muslim Societies: Notes on the Social Production of Cities,” came out in August 2021 from the University of Michigan Press.

A recording of Rashid’s presentation will be available to view Feb. 25. His presentation will be 30-45 minutes, with a short question-and-answer session to follow. Faculty, staff and students are encouraged to offer their impressions and observations of each candidate online. Feedback is due by 5 p.m. March 1.

More information about the school and the search committee can be found online.

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Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

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