Diploma Overview
Earn your Diploma in just 1 year. KCPC offers a variety of options to accommodate the diverse employment opportunities for mental health practitioners.
Choose from four areas of specialization
Click on each area for a detailed program description
*An undergraduate degree is required for Counselling Therapy, and Psychotherapy
Professional Opportunities:
Although KCPC cannot guarantee job placements, graduates from each area of specialization are prepared for entry-to-mid level careers in community agencies, hospitals, treatment centers, and private practice.
KCPC’s Diploma in Applied Psychology and Counselling provides competency-based training in the major theories and techniques used to treat disorders of emotion, cognition, and/or behavior. The difference between the scope of practice in each area of specialization is based on :
- the type of clientele being served;
- severity of clients’ symptoms;
- length and depth of treatment;
- level of the practitioner’s training and clinical experience.
Professional Counsellors treat clients whose mental health issues are typically less severe and shorter in duration than those requiring in-depth intervention.
Addiction Counsellors treat clients struggling with multi-faceted issues involving substance and/or behavioral addictions.
Counseling Therapists and Psychotherapists utilize advanced techniques to treat complex mental health issues that severely impact the client’s emotional, cognitive and/or behavioral functioning.
When difficult to resolve issues fall beyond their professional capacity, all mental health practitioners follow the same ethical protocol: obtain supervision, and/or refer the client to an appropriately qualified practitioner.
Scope of Practice
Working wIthin their scope of practice, Diploma graduates possess the skills required to assess and treat a variety of mental health concerns such as:
- depression, anxiety, and other emotional and behavioral disorders
- assessment and treatment or referral for disorders found in the DSM V
- addictions: prevention, recovery and follow-up treatment
- youth, family, and couples’ issues
- suicide and emergency intervention
- identity and developmental milestones
- loss and grief
- abuse, trauma, and domestic violence