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The
NCHP, formerly Blythe Tutorial College, founded in 1977, provides training in
Hypno‑Psychotherapy at venues in Liverpool, Oxford, Glasgow and London. The NCHP is administered from its registered offices in Nelson,
Lancashire, by an Academic Board, details of which are given
below. Academic
Board Chairman ‑ Professor Jim
Smythe Director of
Psychology Centre, Bradford University
Members of
the Academic Board are responsible for the conduct of the NCHP exams, for the
marking of all exam papers and for the issue of various awards to successful
students. Such awards are confirmed by an external
moderator. Members of
the Board include various persons who, although trained in their respective
field and who have gained academic status, are not members of the staff of the
NCHP. This external factor, combined with our accreditation by the British
Accreditation Council for Independent Further and Higher Education, gives
prestige and credibility to the awards gained by students of the NCHP. Further
to safeguard student interests, two student members are invited to meetings of
the Academic Board. Assessment is based upon conventional academic norms:
continuous assessment by Tutors; course work essays; exams (properly invigilated
by external invigilators); dissertations and practical exams. Other than the
continual assessment, all other assessment is carried out by appropriately
qualified independent assessors, such as psychology lecturers in the state
education sector, and externally moderated by appropriately qualified
personnel. Regulations
concerning specific aspects of the NCHP training, such as the submissions of
course work, standards to be achieved, conduct of exams and appeals procedures
are indicated in the relevant documentation. Complaints
and, or, criticism of any aspect of the NCHP training can be made on the forms
issued for these purposes at the end of all stages of the course. In addition,
students may request that such issues be brought to the attention of the NCHP in
the Tutor's report which is submitted after each block of class contact. Whilst
it is hoped that complaints may be resolved by negotiation with individual
Course Tutors, students are entitled to raise issues with the Academic Board
should they prove intractable. The Academic
Board is continually reviewing the course content to take account of
developments in the profession, and expanding and amending material where
necessary.
External Accreditation The British Accreditation Council for Independent
Further and Higher Education
Without
regulation and statutory registration for our profession, our policy has been to
seek meaningful external
accreditation for our training. We first achieved such accreditation in 1993.
After a successful interim inspection in 1996, a further full inspection led to
our re‑accreditation in 1998, and most recently in 2004. In the event
of regulation and statutory registration, our external accreditation should be
invaluable to our graduates. Meanwhile, it is an assurance to potential students
bewildered by competing claims. The British
Accreditation Council for Independent Further and Higher Education (see enclosed
leaflet), was established in succession to an initiative by the, then, Dept of
Education and Science. Included amongst its sponsors are the bodies mainly
concerned with maintaining academic standards in Britain, such as Universities
and Colleges, national validating bodies' public and professional examining
boards, and the British Council. To conduct
its inspections, The British Accreditation Council calls upon the services of
some 70 specialist inspectors, including former HMI's LEA inspectors and
advisors and current/former heads of Universities, Colleges and
Institutions of Higher
Education and Colleges of Further Education. A copy of the 2004 Inspection
Summary appears on the inside back cover of this prospectus. Copies of the complete Institutional Report
are available upon request. In
order to protect your interests we suggest that you ask any other training
organisation to which you are considering applying for similar
documentation. The
inspection enquired into all aspects of the NCHP's: accommodation and learning
resources; administration and staffing; quality control; welfare arrangements;
teaching, an assessment of academic staff; and the NCHP's financial and legal
viability. The accreditation is subject to renewal, following re‑inspection, at
five-yearly intervals and review at mid‑term. Not surprisingly, such
accreditation has been described by the, then, Secretary of State for Education
as: "...the only public guarantee of
standards in independent institutions of further and higher education in the
UK.". Under
guidelines issued by the Home Office in December 2000, and by virtue of its
accreditation by the British Accreditation Council, the NCHP is identified as a
"bona fide private education institution". Education
UK The British
Council's Education Counselling Service describes the NCHP as a UK institution
"with appropriate recognition", as it is accredited by the British Accreditation
Council. The NCHP is licensed to use the Education UK brand, which was launched
by the Prime Minister in 2001.
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Copyright © 2006 National College of Hypnosis & Psychotherapy
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