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Couple and Family Therapy

Reports from the field

Eric McCollum

Eric McCollum
Eric McCollum

Dr. McCollum earned his Ph.D. from K-State in 1986. The author or co-author of five books, he is professor and director of the marriage and family therapy program at Virginia Tech.

What is special about K-State’s MFT program?

So many things are special. One is its history. Kansas State has been training marriage and family therapists for decades. I graduated nearly 30 years ago and it was a well-established program then. Another is the strength of the faculty. Dr. Candy Russell and Dr. Anthony Jurich were the core faculty members when I was a student and both were national leaders in the field. That trend has continued including now with my classmate and wonderful colleague Dr. Sandra Stith directing the program.

Why are you in MFT?

I have been a therapist for 40 years now – beginning my MSW practicum in 1975 in a community mental health center in Des Moines, IA. At the time I began to study MFT seriously – while I was a social work trainee at the Menninger Clinic which was then located in Topeka – MFT was a revolutionary field. It provided a radical new way to look understand the difficulties people brought to therapy and a wide range of exciting techniques to help them. I remain committed to that possibility – that a systemic understanding can truly be the basis for change at all levels.

In your opinion, what does it take –personally – to have a career in MFT?

I think if you aren’t fascinated by people and their experiences, you won’t last long as an MFT. I feel very grateful for the experiences I have had by proxy as people have allowed me into their worlds to see both the best things that happen in their lives and the most difficult. It has truly made my life richer.

Teri Nelsen

Teri Nelsen
Teri Nelsen

Dr. Nelsen, a licensed clinical marriage and family therapist working at Ft. Riley, earned both a master’s and a doctorate degree from K-State’s MFT program.

Why are you in MFT?

It was my calling — seriously. As an undergrad, I read about MFT and immediately knew it was my passion. Healthy family relationships are a top priority for me both personally and professionally.

What do you do in your current job?

I am honored to provide mental health services to military service members and their family members/dependents in a military medical treatment facility department of behavioral health. I treat them for PTSD, depression, and anxiety, and work with couples and families to help them cope with the stresses of military life style — as well as typical marital and family issues. I have also provided clinical supervision to several MFTs who worked with me to help them obtain their clinical licensure.

What are your biggest challenges in your job and how to you meet them?

Dealing with the military medical system and sometimes conflicting goals of what’s best for my clients vs what’s best for the military (and for tax payers). I use my MFT skills – lots of patience, humor, and diplomacy. Also, I do my best to leave work at work and enjoy my evenings and weekends with family and friends, exercise (walk my dogs!), and doing crafts (mostly knitting) while listening to/ watching funny movies/ TV (especially British humor).

Our shining students

Here are a few of the reasons we are so proud of our students:

• Jonathon Kimmes student was named top PhD apprentice journal reviewer.
• Charity Clifford received the Kansas Association for Marriage and Family Therapy Jurich Student Leadership Award.
• Patricia Barrow-Gomes received an award for her National Council on Family Relations poster.
• Erika Smith earned an award for her K-State Research Forum poster.
• 2 students earned Poresky assistantships.
• 5 students were singled out for their graduate teaching assistantship work.
• 4 students presented cutting edge research posters.
• 11 students won prestigious scholarships, several received more than one.
• 3 students earned fellowships.

A successful combination: students, faculty, alumni and friends

Friends and alumni of our program make a difference in the lives of our students and faculty in many ways. They offer internships, travel to Manhattan to talk with students, hire graduates, help guide the program and donate financial support.

To explore ways to give to the MFT Excellence Fund, contact Suzanne Dell-St. Clair, development director for the College of Human Ecology, at suzanned@found.ksu.edu or 800-432-1578.

Learn more about the Marriage and Family Therapy Program at enewsletters.k-state.edu/mft or on our website at he.k-state.edu/fshs/programs. Stay connected with us by email at ksumft@k-state.edu.

Sept. 17 – Save the date for second Tony Jurich Lecture on Social Justice

Ruben Parra-Cardona, associate professor in the program of couple and family therapy at Michigan State University and associate director of the MSU Research Consortium on Gender-based Violence, will present the second Jurich Lecture on Social Justice at 3 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 17.

Ruben Parra-Cardona
Ruben Parra-Cardona

He will present “Building Bridges of Social Justice: Embracing prevention research to support Latino/a communities in the U.S. and Mexico.”

The afternoon lecture and reception will be at the K-State Student Union. On Friday, Sept. 18, marriage and family therapy alumni and friends are invited to breakfast at the Family Center and then join a program and center tour.

Parra-Cardona’s research, funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), compares and contrasts the differential treatment efficacy and cultural relevance of two culturally adapted versions of an evidence-based parenting intervention.

His violence research focuses on the evaluation of cultural relevance of services for Latino survivors as well as Latino men who batter and abuse.

He serves as consultant for the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence, particularly as it focuses on developing theoretical frameworks for the reduction and elimination of violent behaviors in intimate relationships.

The professor’s clinical experience has included the provision of services to street children engaged in drug trafficking and prostitution, child and adult victims of sexual abuse and violence, as well as federal adult probationers convicted for drug trafficking.

About the Jurich lecture . . .

The Tony Jurich Lecture on Social Justice honors Jurich, a professor who taught in the School of Family Studies and Human Services for more than 39 years before his death in 2010.

Jurich earned national recognition for his work as a leader in the field of family therapy. He believed in social justice and challenged his students and colleagues to value diversity, promote equality and endorse fairness, said Sandra Stith, University distinguished professor and head of the marriage and family therapy program.

In 2014, Jurich’s wife, Olivia Collins, and his brother, Steve Jurich, established the Tony Jurich Community Commitment and Leadership Student Awards, which recognize graduating students who demonstrate a commitment to the professor’s core leadership tenets.

The tenets — strive for resonance; assume value and be respectful; be compassionate; do what is right; seek out, affirm and utilize diversity; and lead by example — provide a road map for sustainable community change, said Marcie Lechtenberg, marriage and family therapist, instructor and therapist supervisor in the School of Family Studies and Human Services. She received a Jurich graduate student award in 2014.

“Tony was loved and respected as a dedicated therapist, an enthusiastic teacher and researcher, and a wise supervisor and mentor,” Lechtenberg said.

First lecture focuses on domestic violence offenders, human trafficking

Dorthy Stucky Halley became the first Tony Jurich Lecture on Social Justice when she addressed a crowd of students, faculty and community members on domestic violence and human trafficking on March 12 in the K-State Union.

Dorthy Stucky Halley
Dorthy Stucky Halley

Halley, who helped develop and was the first coordinator of the Human Trafficking Advisory Board for the Kansas attorney general, warned against stereotyping domestic violence offenders who vary greatly in the type of violence they perpetrate and motives behind their aggression. She listed major motives as entitlement, survival and sadistic.

She also dispelled stereotypes about human traffic victims.

In Kansas, people are often trafficked by a family member, she said. More than 350 victims of human trafficking in Kansas were reported to the state attorney general’s office during fiscal 2014. In at least a third of the cases, the trafficker was the spouse or partner, Halley said.

She is director of victim services for the Kansas attorney general and a licensed master social worker.

Her lecture was presented by the marriage and family therapy program, which is offered by the School of Family Studies and Human Services in Kansas State University’s College of Human Ecology.

In this issue . . .

Sandra Stith named university distinguished professor

Report from the field: Darcy R. Easley working with problem sexual  behaviors in children

Report from the field: Matt Johnson at University of Alberta

Faculty teaching, research reach around the world

The Family Center: a place of research, applied science and matchless student opportunity

From scholarships to presentations, our students’ accomplishments are impressive

Meet our new Ph.D. cohort

Introducing our new master’s degree students

Update on new graduates

Thank you note