Qualifications Like other counseling professions, art therapists are required to obtain a master’s degree to practice. Therapists at the Art Station, all have LPC’s and all non-interns have ATR-BC’s.After graduation, students should have already completed hundreds of hours of supervised clinical work. Students must become familiar with art tools and and techniques and should have experience in art. For example, if a client isn’t sure how to use clay , an art therapist should be able to assist. Knowledge on various supplies is also necessary because art therapists should understand which art tool will be the most effective during specific sessions. Art therapy programs must be approved by the Educational Programs Approval board (EPAB),Commission …show more content…
The former was supported by Margaret Naumburg, in which art was symbolistic and can be used in diagnostics. Naumburg pushed the idea that clients could explore their unconscious through the work they conceived. The other approach was pushed by Edith Kramer, in which the process of creating art itself was therapy. Kramer believed that just the act itself could be a form of healing where clients could express themselves in ways they otherwise wouldn’t (Junge, 2016). For example a child could transform “destructive thoughts” into and end product they could be proud of. Today Art therapists combine and interlace multiple different theories and techniques (Dunn-Snow, 2015). Cognitive-Behavioral therapy is currently one of the most effective approaches used today which is why its combination with art therapy is quite …show more content…
Patients suffering from psychosis tend experience hallucinations and delusions, suffer from disorganized thought patterns and actions, and change their behavior (Hanevik,Hestad &Teglbjaerg,2013), as is typical in sub disorders like schizophrenia and delusional disorders. According to a review by the national Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence in Britain, consistent evidence has been found that art therapies are effective in reducing the negative symptoms of schizophrenia. In this particular study by Hanevik, Hestad & Teglbjaerg, the aim was to help patients understand their psychotic experiences; the exploration of art therapy (as exploration of the psychotic experience) would allow them to cope with their disorder in a better way. The study was carried out under naturalistic clinical conditions and the therapy was offered on a regular basis in a group therapy setting in a psychiatric hospital. Two of the participants described how they, through the use of art therapy, “were able to control their psychosis.” The rest reported improvement in mastering their psychosis. It was even reported by a participant that the therapy helped her distinguish between hallucinations and spiritual experiences. It seems as