HSCeP Sessions in Applied Psychology
Building on HSCeP 10 and including effects on personal, family and community attitudes and influences on Aboriginal communities and communities at large. The Sessions 11 course will continue to offer advanced exposure to a wide variety of Applied Psychology related topics and training that students will need as they move into their mentoring opportunities. High school students will attend specially crafted sessions that will reinforce previously learned material while continuing to expose them t
Students will be able to: Use the special skills that they have practiced during the sessions under the tutelage of teachers, university professors, specialists from a wide array of disciplines including; Supreme Court Justice, MCFD, BBBS, UFV, First Nations, in their side by side volunteer work in the elementary schools on the North side (at this time). These skills are intended to be life changing to both the senior students and their elementary “buddies”.
The science of psychology informs our understanding of behaviour and mental processes. Physiological structures, functions, and processes influence our perceptions and behaviour. Environmental, social, cultural, and biological factors interact to influence behaviour and mental processes. Thinking and intelligence affect many aspects of everyday life.
Aboriginal Worldviews and Perspectives: The course has First Nations awareness and perspective woven into its very fabric. Adverse Childhood Experiences, Attachment Theory, Contact Comfort, Generational Trauma, Aboriginal Culture and History; is incorporated into all three years of the program with the material being delivered by Sto:lo Health Manager and leaders from the community. Prejudice, stereotypes, and discrimination which were studied in a general sense in the grade 10 course are exp