At a Glance
Accreditation
CACREP; approved by Oregon Board of Licensed Professional Counselors and Therapists
Format
Semester Credit Hours
64
Cost per Semester Credit Hour
$802
Tuition cost for entire program
$51,328
* All stated financial information is subject to change. Financial aid available.
Build Bridges of Understanding
Sometimes people need a fresh perspective to navigate the challenges that are inherent in human relationships. As a marriage, couple and family counselor, you can provide insights that transform the lives of your clients and enhance the well-being of everyone in their circle.
Our program will prepare you to serve couples and families in private practice, at for-profit and nonprofit organizations, and in hospitals and schools. To help you reach your professional goals, we offer day, evening and weekend courses in a variety of formats:
- Our Online Synchronous Track includes live Zoom classes plus a few courses you can complete on your own schedule. In your first year, you’ll join us in person at our Portland campus as part of the Fall Residency experience. You'll also have the option of taking classes in person each term as space permits.
- In our In-Person Synchronous Track, you’ll attend most of your classes (and the first-year Fall Residency experience) at our Portland campus. You can enroll in Online Synchronous Track courses each term as space permits, and you’ll have access to classes that you can take via Zoom or complete on your own schedule.
Note: You’ll apply to one of these tracks during the admissions process.
Program Philosophy
Our counseling programs are rooted in the belief that:
- People are spiritual-psychological-physical-relational beings.
- Marriage and family counselors need to be able to understand and articulate individual, couple, and family presenting problems and provide treatment from sound psychological and theological principles.
- Marriage and family counselors need to possess the skills of a generalist and be equipped to work with a variety of clients and client modalities of diverse backgrounds and varied developmental stages across the life cycle.
Spiritual Integration
Because of Â鶹´«Ã½ Fox University’s identity as a Christian university, the programs in the Graduate School of Counseling are grounded in and shaped by our commitment to an integrated understanding of the Christian faith and mental health that embraces diversity and promotes justice.
Our approach to spiritual integration does not specifically prepare graduates to be Christian counselors or work at faith-based organizations.
All together, we believe it’s our duty to prepare our students to know how to integrate the worldview of any person they work with, whether or not they share the same spiritual perspectives.
Dual Licensure: LMFT and LPC
The marriage, couple and family counseling master of arts degree is designed to prepare students to sit for dual licensure, both the national licensure exam to become a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC), as well as the national licensure exam to become a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT) in Oregon. The opportunity to earn dual licensure is a unique and valuable feature of this program.
Program Advantages
- Accredited by CACREP (Council for Accreditation of Counseling & Related Educational Programs)
- Three- and four-year program options
- Flexible schedules (day, evening and weekend classes) and formats (online and in-person) for working adults
- An environment that encourages the integration of faith and learning
- Full-time, accessible and widely trained faculty
- Courses taught from a systemic perspective
- Opportunities to interact with students who are pursuing other mental health professions
Program Requirements
The master’s degree program requires a minimum of 64 semester hours of coursework for graduation. Of those hours, a minimum of 46 hours must be taken in resident study at Â鶹´«Ã½ Fox University, and each student must complete a minimum of 20 hours of personal counseling/therapy as part of the program.
Students must also complete a 700-hour supervised clinical internship in marriage and family therapy that meets the currently articulated criteria for such training, with at least 280 hours of direct client contact. Of those 280 direct-client contact hours, 120 must be with couples and families.
Play Therapy and Trauma Courses
As a student in our counseling program, you will have the opportunity to take introductory play therapy courses through the Northwest Center for Play Therapy Studies.
The center, directed by Dr. Daniel Sweeney, past president of the Association for Play Therapy and both author and coauthor of several books on play therapy and child therapy, hosts graduate courses in filial therapy, sandtray therapy and special topics courses, as well as biannual conferences offering workshops that attract presenters and participants from across the nation.
The Trauma Response Institute (TRI), directed by Dr. Anna Berardi, offers individual specialization classes in trauma response and a full 12-credit certificate program.
Employment Outlook
Job prospects in the field are promising. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, demand for marriage and family therapists is expected to increase 16% in the U.S. between 2023 and 2033, a rate much faster than the average profession.
Learn more about the salary and employment outlook for marriage and family counselors
Why Â鶹´«Ã½ Fox? A Testimonial by Tim Ide
When I began Â鶹´«Ã½ Fox's Marriage, Couple & Family Counseling program I had owned an electronic manufacturing business for 22 years. Some things had happened in my family that were dramatically assisted by a counselor, and while going through the process of therapy I gained a newfound respect for counseling. My own experience with a counselor was compelling as I realized that counseling is a process more than simply finding solutions to problems. I realized I was far more interested in working with people than machines at this stage in my life, so I was highly motivated to go back to school and get my counseling degree.
I was able to keep working full time while completing the program. At times it was difficult getting acclimated to the academic discipline of school after being away for so long. I was initially intimidated by the idea of being in class with students who were younger than me. But in the end I found that age differences between students were not an issue. I had a really good experience in the program.
I chose Â鶹´«Ã½ Fox because of its in-person class format. I considered online programs, but because counseling is such a human field I chose an in-person program, and Â鶹´«Ã½ Fox's location and cost were a fit for me. I appreciate how the program shaped me as a person. Counseling is very relational. There is a lot of observation needed in terms of body language and expression, and you lose a lot of that online.
The counseling program at Â鶹´«Ã½ Fox enhanced my empathy and really taught me that every person is going through something.
During my internship and after graduation I had the opportunity to be a counselor for the population I really wanted to work with: kids, youth and families. The most fulfilling thing about my internship through Â鶹´«Ã½ Fox, at Yamhill Family & Youth Programs, was the supervisors. All of them were right on point, and I know other students from Â鶹´«Ã½ Fox would say the same thing about their supervisors. At the end of the day, great supervision was huge for me.
Tim Ide (M.A. '18)
Marriage, Couple & Family Counselor
Questions?
Kelly Peterson
Admissions Counselor, Graduate Counseling Programs
Other Careers in Behavioral Health
Not sure if counseling is right for you? Â鶹´«Ã½ Fox also offers degrees in social work and psychology. Check out our other offerings on our Careers in Helping Professions page.
Â鶹´«Ã½ Fox University is required to make cost of attendance (COA) information publicly available on this website.