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黑料不打烊 Impact

Through Free Therapy Sessions, Students Provide Enormous Service to 黑料不打烊 Community

Friday, March 15, 2024, By Matt Michael
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Couple and Family Therapy Center director Tyler Sliker and graduate student Kalila Taylor.

Tyler Sliker (left), clinic director at the Couple and Family Therapy Center, chats with Department of Marriage and Family Therapy graduate student Kalila Taylor in one of the therapy rooms at Peck Hall.

In 2023, student therapists from the Department of Marriage and Family Therapy in 黑料不打烊鈥檚 provided a total of 9,134 therapy sessions to 682 individuals. Those free sessions in the Couple and Family Therapy Center at Peck Hall included 3,713 for individuals and 5,412 for couples and families.

Think about those numbers for a minute鈥揳nd the impact the sessions had on those in the community surrounding the 黑料不打烊 campus.

鈥淚f not for the hard work of our students and faculty鈥揼iven the dire state of mental health services in our community and most communities鈥搃t鈥檚 likely many of these clients would experience long waitlists elsewhere, reduced services due to expense or go without mental healthcare altogether,鈥 says , clinic director at the . 鈥淭his work is truly critical to our community and beyond as it鈥檚 training much-needed therapists and providing much-needed care.鈥

Indeed, this is a mutually beneficial arrangement as students seeking to earn their or in marriage and family therapy are provided real-life opportunities to hone their craft.

Marriage and Family Therapy graduate student Kalila Taylor.

Kalila Taylor says she gravitated toward marriage and family therapy because it鈥檚 鈥渁 field that gives me the opportunity to make a real difference in peoples鈥 lives.鈥

鈥淭he thing about studying to be a therapist is that the only way to learn is by doing,鈥 says Kalila Taylor, who鈥檚 on track to earn her master鈥檚 degree in May. 鈥淚 was incredibly nervous when I first started seeing clients, but with the support of my colleagues and supervisors, I was able to develop my skills and build my confidence as a therapist.鈥

Taylor, who is from Jacksonville, Florida, earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree in philosophy with a minor in psychology from Florida State University. In researching graduate programs, she discovered 黑料不打烊 and the exceptional reputation forged by the , which offered the first accredited master鈥檚 degree in the country.

鈥淚鈥檝e always wanted to better understand human behavior and have been continuously fascinated by how we relate to one another as people,鈥 Taylor says. 鈥淢arriage and family therapy combines a lot of my various interests while also being a field that gives me the opportunity to make a real difference in people鈥檚 lives.鈥

Student therapists start seeing clients when they鈥檙e enrolled in MFT 760 (Practicum in Marriage and Family Therapy), and that鈥檚 typically in their second semester of the program. Sliker says their caseload varies depending on client need and the readiness of the student, but ideally students start their clinical work with four to five cases.

Taylor says when she first started seeing clients, she was concerned about managing conflict in the room. However, through supervision and experience, she learned how to help her clients navigate conflict in their relationships while also normalizing that conflict for herself.

Eventually, Taylor was providing up to 20 sessions per week.

鈥淚 think it can be especially challenging to help a client process an experience that you haven鈥檛 worked through yet in your own life,鈥 she says. 鈥淎gain, that鈥檚 why supervision is so important so that you get the opportunity to talk through your own personal obstacles to show up better for your clients.鈥

To ensure quality training for student therapists and beneficial care to their clients, Marriage and Family Therapy faculty and staff provide supervision to the students working with individuals, couples and families. In 2023, faculty and staff provided more than 1,800 hours of supervision to 16 students.

The students are supervised on a weekly basis, at minimum, and Sliker says it鈥檚 common for student therapists who are just getting started to reach out to on-call supervisors between their regularly scheduled supervision meetings.聽Marriage and family therapists are only able to see clients unsupervised when they鈥檙e fully licensed.

In New York State, that鈥檚 roughly two years after graduation, if they鈥檝e been working full-time as a therapist since receiving their graduate degree. If you鈥檙e a member of the community who meets with a fully licensed marriage and family therapist, and that therapist is licensed in New York, you can expect your therapist has had about 3 陆 years of supervised clinical experience, including 1 陆 years of graduate school.

Couple and Family Therapy clinic director Tyler Sliker.

As clinic director of the Couple and Family Therapy Center, Tyler Sliker works with faculty and staff to coordinate the thousands of therapy sessions that marriage and family therapy students provide each year.

鈥淪tudents often begin their journey to become a therapist with excitement as well as plenty of anxiety and uncertainty of their ability,鈥 Sliker says. 鈥淗owever, therapy is most effective when there is a strong relationship between therapist and client. For those who find themselves in a Marriage and Family Therapy graduate program, there is often already a strong ability to build relationships, and beginning therapists usually have the necessary skills to successfully navigate those initial sessions with clients.

鈥淭hen the path to becoming a great therapist, in my opinion, is forged by the therapist鈥檚 continued investment in their growth and development, a lifetime connection with supervisors and mentors, and genuine care for the clients they serve,鈥 Sliker adds.

Taylor says there鈥檚 an immense feeling of satisfaction when a therapist is able to form relationships with clients, watch them progress in real time, and help them develop skills they didn鈥檛 have at the start of therapy. In what may seem like a strange twist to someone outside of the therapy sessions, Taylor says one of her proudest moments occurred when a couple she was working with chose to separate.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe it鈥檚 the job of a therapist to tell clients what to do because I think clients should be treated like the experts of their own experience,鈥 Taylor says. 鈥淚 was proud of this couple for coming to the realization that breaking up was the best thing for both of them because that can be one of the most difficult decisions to make. I remember those clients thanking me for helping them throughout the process, which was such an amazing moment that provided to me a lot of encouragement.鈥

For Taylor, it was a rewarding moment among many that occur for student therapists every day at the Couple and Family Therapy Center.

鈥淏ecoming a therapist is similar to learning a craft or an art: One learns by doing,鈥 Sliker says. 鈥淪o as much as our community benefits from the services the Couple and Family Therapy Center provides, the students are benefiting just as much.鈥

The Couple and Family Therapy Center is open from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday. The center provides free, confidential sessions in-person and virtually. To inquire about receiving therapy services, call 315.443.3023.

  • Author

Matt Michael

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