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Original articles

Professional Training in Applied Psychology: Towards a Signature Pedagogy for Forensic Psychology Training

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Pages 183-189 | Received 09 Sep 2011, Accepted 09 Sep 2011, Published online: 12 Nov 2020
 

Abstract

Forensic Psychology is a recognised and important sub‐specialty of the Psychology discipline. However, after an expansion in the number of training places that were offered when programmes were first developed, recent years have seen these diminish in response to changes in university policies, resulting from reformulated Federal government funding models. In this article, we argue that it is important for the future of specialist areas of professional psychology to not only articulate the core skills and competencies that are associated with specialist practice but also to develop unique and distinctive approaches to teaching and learning signature pedagogies. Based on the premise that forensic psychological practice is, indeed, a distinctive activity that requires different skills and, importantly, different ways of thinking about the work from other areas of professional psychology, it is suggested that professional training in this area should aim to develop a signature pedagogy which combines methods of teaching and learning that have been developed in legal training programmes with principles of problem‐based learning.

Notes

1 A new set of competencies is currently being developed by the APS College of Forensic Psychologists.

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