• Professional Development
  • Medicine & Nursing
  • Arts & Crafts
  • Health & Wellbeing
  • Personal Development

76 Educators providing Home Improvement courses in London

The Institute Of Psychosynthesis

the institute of psychosynthesis

3.0(2)

London

The Institute of Psychosynthesis has trained Counsellors, Psychotherapists and Coaches for almost 50 years within a unique psychospiritual Psychosynthesis framework and within the context of Serving Humanity in Transition, as we stand before great change. We have been validated since 1996 by our partner Middlesex University for our MA programmes. The pandemic caused us and many others to re-think how to deliver our training, to be creative in delivering what we know worked as an in person training, in a new and equally captivating and evocative way online. Our experience during the pandemic was key to the creation of our new Distance learning validation for our MA Programmes in Psychosynthesis Psychology as well as in Psychosynthesis Leadership and Organisational Coaching. And there is no requirement for an undergraduate degree to join our MA programmes as we assess suitability on life experience and an ability to self-reflect. Join us for one of our free open events where we will start with a short meditation and give an overview of Psychosynthesis within the context of our training and talk about the professional pathways we offer. SERVING HUMANITY IN TRANSITION “An individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.” Martin Luther King, Jr. The Institute of Psychosynthesis is a psychospiritual training and self-development centre in North London that offers a wide range of training in psychosynthesis to enable our graduates to make a significant difference in their worlds.

CRR UK

crr uk

Organisation and Relationship Systems Coaching (ORSC™) is an innovative and powerful coaching model based on Relationship Systems Intelligence (RSI™). A ‘relationship system’ is any interdependent group of people, sharing a common identity or function. We are all part of many different systems. In our organisations, our teams, our families, our intimate relationships and the wider society. Everything is interconnected. If something changes in one area of a system, it will have effects in places that often we won’t expect. ORSC is a methodology that combines ‘systems thinking’ with coaching. By becoming an ORSC practitioner, you will become aware of your own impact on the bigger picture and be able to consciously design your relationships. You will learn an invaluable set of tools to coach others to do the same. The Five Modules of ORSC All ORSC journeys begin with either the Fundamentals or ORS@Work module. Both introductory courses are based on the same set of skills and principles. Fundamentals is geared more toward personal coaching, therapy, or social work applications. ORS@Work is designed specifically with HR, OD, LD, business coaching or consulting in mind. Fundamentals or ORS@Work— teaches five key ORSC tools, including how to coach the Third Entity. Intelligence— provides a robust toolkit for increasing emotional resilience in the face of change. Geography — explores how to recognise and nurture the structures of relationships. Path — explores how to create a shared vision and a strategic plan for achieving it. Systems Integration— brings all the pieces together and provides a learning space to hone skills to work towards mastery. The subsequent four courses in the series must be studied in sequential order, as content layers and builds with each module. On completion of the five modules, students may choose to pursue ORSC certification. Whatever work we do, we are always in relationship. Through ORSC training we learn the concepts, skills and tools to be more effective with others. A ‘relationship system’ is any interdependent group of people, sharing a common identity or function. Psychologists might refer to a ‘collective consciousness’. Business consultants might talk about a ‘corporate culture’. Therapists would likely address ‘family dynamics’. All are ways of referring to what we call the Third Entity.