Joseph M.Cervantes
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I am a mental health professional who is informed by both his Chicano/Latino and Native American roots, as well as by years of
professional training as a child and family psychologist. Nurturing a deep respect for the interconnectedness of all life, as well as the role that one's
psychospiritual heritage plays in one's life journey, have made me
increasingly aware of a life force that is a significant core of our being.
I am humanistically oriented both by personal upbringing and professional
training. I feel very committed to learning from others' truths as they impact
who I am in my personal and interpersonal formation.
A deep appreciation and understanding for the personal and psychological
formation of one's being is the precursor towards the transformation of
one's essence. Thus, an essential
philosophical belief for me is to understand the transformative role that life
events play, how to maximize learning from these experiences, and subsequently
to appreciate the more relevant agenda, that is, an increased awareness of
service to one's community.
Teaching Interests
As a professor, my teaching interests at the university
have focused primarily in three areas: ethics,
clinical spirituality, and multicultural instruction.
It has been my experience as a practitioner that mental health
professionals need to be increasingly more aware of the role that human
diversity plays in counseling practice. This issue of difference tends to highlight not just ethnic
and cultural diversity, but also awareness and a practiced professional skill
level in how gender, sexual orientation, and disability interface with human
functioning. Further, the issue of
ethics continues to be a significant dimension to a practitioner's
professional work. It is my feeling
that in order to be grounded in a modality of practice that emphasizes life-long
learning, one also needs to be committed to being the best practitioner one can
be in his or her area of designated specialty.
This involves knowledge of how the handling of various clinical and
counseling issues impact values, decision-making and intervention.
Thus, our ethical awareness in practice is a life-long skill that needs
continued refinement. Lastly, the role of spirituality, while not necessarily
taught in our specific course work, is underscored by the problems of daily
living that clients characteristically present within a counseling practice.
The awareness, respect and skill level in understanding the impact of
spirituality in counseling is infused through those courses that I teach.
Research Interests
Areas of research have been primarily focused in ethnic and
cultural diversity along with writing about clinical spirituality.
I have found that the interaction between these two content areas are
extremely valuable for practice in the new millennia, and relevant to document
how this interaction occurs. With
the advent of increased acceptance for a wide range of human diversity in our
worldview philosophies, it has become imperative that we also document and
research those arenas that help our society to advance.
It is these two areas that form the cornerstone to my writing, as well as
my professional practice in the community.
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