Historical Perspective
The interest in the field of Music Therapy in Portugal dates back
to the late 60's, when a group of educators, psychologists and physicians
first learned about this discipline and started to empirically apply
the principles of the therapeutic use of music in their daily work
with patients and students. However, it is important to understand
that music therapy in Portugal is still a professional activity
in the preliminary stages of establishing itself as a discipline.
Some empirical work has been done by professionals in related fields,
seminars and introductory workshops have been held throughout the
past three decades, and a training program existed in the early
90's, which produced a limited number of graduates.
Although a few psychiatrists and psychologists have implemented
music therapy activities in hospitals and mental health centers,
the interest of Portuguese professionals in music therapy has mostly
grown among those who worked with children. In the field of special
education, music therapy practices evolved within the context of
recreational music activities, with therapeutic implications for
handicapped children and adolescents. Arquimedes Santos, the pioneer
of the "Education through the Arts" movement, has been
one of the first to highlight the importance of creative arts being
used within a psycho-educational or a therapeutic approach to children
and adults.
Since the music therapy program in Madeira (see Training Programs
section) produced its first graduates, a number of special education
and mental health professionals have been conducting therapeutic
music activities throughout the country. Requests for information
and training have been made in increasing numbers by psychology
students, special education teachers and music educators. At the
present moment, there is a new program starting in Lisbon and the
Portuguese Music Therapy Association is beginning to plan other
initiatives that will bring together all professionals involved
and develop a music therapy professional community. Training and
practice standards have not yet been established and implemented
at an official level.
Theoretical Foundations
There are two major trends in the practice of music therapy in
Portugal, each involving different theoretical frameworks:
1 - The practice of music therapy according to the psycho-educational
model of intervention. This has emerged from the field of special
education and it involves most of the work being done with children
in the country. Within this framework, music serves as a therapeutic
activity in the psycho-educational plan that is developed for each
child, according to her age, level of functioning, specific difficulties
and potential abilities. Generally speaking, it can be said that
this work consists of the application of music education methods
(Orff, Willems, Kodaly) within a therapeutic approach.
2 - This trend began with the initiative of a few musically trained
mental health professionals who have done some clinical work in
music therapy at the empirical level. Music was integrated in either
recreational therapy activities in both inpatient and outpatient
settings. Other mental health specialists developed therapeutic
work with music in both individual and group settings. In these
situations, music therapy is seen as a form of psychotherapy within
the context of a multidisciplinary intervention. Improvisation and
sound exploration is the main method used and music serves as a
vehicle for self-expression and communication. The professionals
involved in these projects received training and supervision from
psychoanalytically oriented therapists and they use music therapy
techniques from a psycho-dynamic theoretical perspective (Freud,
Winnicott, Mahler).
Organisations and Associations
The Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation is a cultural organisation,
which hosted some of the earlier projects involving music and "expressive
re-education". The Gulbenkian Foundation also sponsored other
initiatives involving music therapy and music in special education,
such as providing funds for music educators to work in centers for
handicapped children, offering scholarships for professionals to
attend seminars and conferences in Portugal and abroad, and also
inviting foreign music therapists to lecture in Portugal.
The APEM (Portuguese Association for Music Education) was the first
Portuguese association to recognise this type of work and serve
as a connection between Portuguese and International professionals
in music therapy related areas, represented by Graziela Cintra Gomes.
APEM and Ms. Gomes have played a significant role in Portugal in
stimulating interest in music therapy and music in special education.
APEM served as a forum for professionals and students interested
in music therapy until the formation of the Portuguese Music Therapy
Association, in 1996.
The Portuguese Music Therapy Association (APMT) is the only music
therapy organisation currently existing in Portugal and it has been
presided by Fernanda Magno Prim since its formation in 1996 until
February 2001. In 1997, APMT hosted the Pre-Congress of the European
Music Therapy Federation. Since then, the APMT has been attempting
to gather the professionals already practising music therapy in
Portugal, as well as promoting music therapy seminars, workshops
and short courses. Its next objective is to create a music therapy
library, to establish a music therapy referral service and to begin
elaborating a set of standards for the practice and recognition
of music therapy professionals and training programs. The APMT is
represented in the EMTC and the WFMT in the person of its current
president, Teresa Leite.
APMT's Postal Address:
Rua Conde de Almoster, 24-5° Dto
Email: musicoterapia@sapo.pt
1500-194 Lisboa Phone: 351-93-324-2678
Training Programs
The first music therapy training program that existed in Portugal
was lead by Dr. Jacqueline Verdeau-Paillés and sponsored
by the Madeira Regional Department of Special Education. Between
its first and second classes, it evolved into a three-year program
with 6 weeks of intensive coursework, 3 years of documented fieldwork
and the elaboration of a final monograph. This program required
that students would have at least a Bachelor's degree, previously
acquired musical training and also psychology or special education
academic training. As a requirement for graduation, students also
needed to show proof of additional training in psychiatry, psychology,
music theory and history, as well as ear, vocal and instrumental
training. From these two classes, approximately 20 students graduated
as music therapists, according to a recognition arrangement between
the Paris V / René Descartes University and the Regional
Department of Special Education of Madeira.
Starting in October of 2001, a new program will be functioning
at the Technical University of Lisbon, Graduate School of Human
Psychomotor Development. This will be a two-and-a-half-year post-graduate
program (10 hrs/week) that will issue a non-degree diploma in Expressive
Therapies. The first year has a common curriculum in the areas of
psychology, human development, psychopathology and the expressive
arts therapies, and in the latter three semesters, students will
specialise in either music therapy or dance therapy. This program
is mostly based in Humanistic Theories and Developmental Psychology.
Recognition
Until the present moment, there have not been any established standards
of recognition for either the practice or the teaching of Music
Therapy in Portugal. The APMT is planning to discuss and establish
such guidelines in the near future, in accordance to European standards.
Literature
The only Portuguese music therapy publication is a compilation
of articles issued by the APMT at the time of the Pre-Congress of
1997 for the EMTC. This publication was titled "Cadernos de
Musicoterapia". Aside from this publication, several articles
have been published in speciality journals and mainstream magazines
about the therapeutic use of music and its application in the field
of education.
Delegate:
Teresa
Paula Leite, Ph.D., is a psychologist and a music therapist
who has trained in both Portugal and the United States of America.
She holds a Clinical Psychology Degree ("licenciatura")
from the Graduate Institute of Applied Psychology, in Lisbon, a
Master's Degree inn Music Therapy from New York University and a
Doctoral Degree (Ph.D.) in Clinical Psychology from Adelphi University,
in New York. She also studied piano and music at the Lisbon Conservatorium
of Music and is a graduate of the first music therapy program held
in Madeira. She has worked in both inpatient and outpatient facilities
with psychiatric patients, adults, children and adolescents. She
is currently a professor of Psychology and Music Therapy in Portugal
at Lusíada University in Porto, Évora University and
the Graduate School of Education João de Deus, in Lisbon.
She also conducts a private practice in verbal and music psychotherapy
in Lisbon.
Teresa Leite is the current president of the APMT and the Portuguese
delegate in both the EMTC and the WFMT. She is a member of the Education
and Training Committee of the WMTF, and a member of the Research
Committee and Vice-President of the EMTC.
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