Dec 21, 2024  
2014-2015 Graduate Bulletin 
    
2014-2015 Graduate Bulletin [ARCHIVED BULLETIN]

Department of Psychology


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Chair
John McNulty

Professors
Michael Basso
Allan Harkness
Elana Newman
Robert Tett

Associate Professors
Bradley Brummel
Joanne Davis
John McNulty
Anupama Narayan
Jamie Rhudy

Assistant Professors
Lisa Cromer
Justin Feinstein
David Fisher
Jennifer Ragsdale
David Fisher

Applied Assistant Professor
Joanna Shadlow

Graduate Program Advisors
Michael Basso, Clinical Psychology
Robert Tett, Industrial-Organizational Psychology

The Psychology Department offers courses leading to the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in industrial-organizational psychology and in clinical psychology.

Learning Objectives

Master of Arts in Industrial-Organizational Psychology. Students who complete the M.A. program will have (1) the ability to apply theory and methods to help organizations solve people-related problems, (2) knowledge of the aims, practices, and strategies of organizations, workgroups, and individual workers to achieve fit, (3) knowledge of methods suited to testing the qualities of specific HR-related practices and interventions serving organizational aims, (4) the ability to communicate with technical proficiency in terms understandable by lay professionals, and (5) standards of academic, research, and business professionalism.

Master of Arts in Clinical Psychology. The master’s program shares three training objectives with the doctoral program: (1) provide a generalist model of training in diverse aspects of psychology including biological, developmental, social, and cognitive science; (2) promote a scientific attitude toward clinical practice and prepare students for clinical research; and (3) promote high academic, ethical, and professional standards in all aspects of professional development and practice. It differs from the doctoral program in an important respect. Master’s level psychologists who graduate from our program are not prepared for independent practice or licensure. As such, the program’s fourth objective is to (4) prepare students for doctoral study in clinical psychology or further training in related fields (e.g., counseling, social work).

Doctor of Philosophy in Industrial-Organizational Psychology. Students who complete the Ph.D. program will have (1) the ability to apply theory and methods to help organizations solve people-related problems, (2) knowledge of the aims, practices, and strategies of organizations, workgroups, and individual workers to achieve fit, 3) knowledge of methods suited to testing the qualities of specific HR-related practices and interventions service organizational aims, (4) the ability to communicate with technical proficiency in terms understandable by lay professionals, (5) standards of academic, research, and business professionalism, and (6) the ability to design and execute research studies independently, addressing questions relevant to organizational interventions involving people.

Doctor of Philosophy in Clinical Psychology. The goal of the program is to train professionally competent clinical psychologists with a broad background in the field of psychology who can apply psychological theory, assessment, research methodology, and clinical skill to complex clinical problems. To elaborate this goal, our doctoral program has four broad training objectives: (1) provide a generalist model of training in diverse aspects of psychology including biological, developmental, social, and cognitive science; (2) promote a scientific attitude toward clinical practice and prepare students for clinical research; (3) promote high academic, ethical, and professional standards in all aspects of professional development and practice; and (4) prepare students for entry level competence in and a commitment to lifelong learning about psychotherapy and assessment including the ability to adapt their approaches to diverse populations.

Admission

Admission to the programs is selective, and because of high demand, not all qualified applicants can be admitted. Minimum requirements for admission include a baccalaureate degree from an accredited institution, an undergraduate grade point average of 3.0 or better (on a 4-point scale), satisfactory letters of recommendation, an adequate background in psychology, and satisfactory test scores on the verbal and quantitative portions of the Graduate Record Examination. Candidates for clinical programs typically have completed a minimum of 18 credit hours of undergraduate course work in psychology including courses in abnormal psychology, and either statistics, tests and measurements, or experimental psychology. Undergraduate course work in I-O psychology, statistics, and research methods is recommended for applicants to the I-O program. Admission to the doctoral programs is open to applicants who have completed a bachelor’s degree, as well as applicants who have completed a master’s degree. Applications for admission to the graduate psychology programs are evaluated once a year for a Fall entering semester. The application deadline for the clinical psychology graduate program is December 1 and the application deadline for the I-O psychology program is December 15.

Programs

    Master’sDoctoral

    Courses

      Psychology

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