Abstract
Therapists are often unprepared to deal with their clients’ use of other languages. This study focuses on therapists’ experiences of having undertaken awareness-raising training about multilingualism. Did the training impact their practice? If so, in what areas? Adopting a mixed-method approach, quantitative data were initially collected via an online questionnaire with 88 therapy trainees and qualified therapists who underwent training in multilingualism, combined with interview data from 7 volunteers. Having identified the issues on which the training had had most and least impact in survey responses, the interviews were guided by our emergent interest into the impact of the training with potential relational complexities and unique, personal experiences in mind. A narrative-thematic analysis uncovered interrelated themes: changes, or impact of the training, with regard to Identity and Therapeutic Theory. Therapists referred to considerable transformative learning on both a personal and professional level, for instance in terms of how multilingual clients might bring different and sometimes conflicting ways of organizing events and experiences into meaningful wholes through their narratives during the session. Language switching seemed less significant in the survey, but emerged as a central theme in the interviews, especially with regard to the possibility of addressing, challenging and sometimes combining different emotional memories, cultural and existential concerns. Working across these areas triggered some therapists to consider the need for expanding their theory.
Highlights
IntroductionAwareness of multilingualism in therapy is a relatively new field of inquiry
Multilingualism in PsychotherapyAwareness of multilingualism in therapy is a relatively new field of inquiry.2 Many practitioners do not consider their language(s) to play any significant part of theirCharleson, Metanoia Institute London
The training, which is evaluated in this paper has been delivered since 2010 to a variety of therapy trainees and qualified therapists
Summary
Awareness of multilingualism in therapy is a relatively new field of inquiry.. Many practitioners do not consider their language(s) to play any significant part of their. 8) suggest, it is “common to be fluent in a language without having to consider how it is put together or what stops it falling apart We will consider the impact of multilingual training on therapists, using a mixed-methods approach. The training, which is evaluated in this paper has been delivered since 2010 to a variety of therapy trainees and qualified therapists. The study is situated within a new wave of research on multilingualism and psychotherapy whose main aim is to gain a better understanding of the roles of clients’ languages in therapy and ways for therapists to handle and interpret code-switching appropriately and accurately
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