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Clinical Psychology PhD Program

Founded on a scientist-practitioner model, the overall goal of the Clinical Psychology PhD Program is to graduate academic psychologists who are competent, ethical and productive in the science and practice of clinical psychology. Our program emphasizes the integration of science and clinical practice.

Directors' Message Student Admissions, Outcomes & Other Data Diversity, Equity, Inclusion & Social Justice

How to Apply

Learn more about the criteria for applying to the program as well as tuition and financial aid.

Our curriculum is structured to maximize clinical, research and ethical training for students.

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Meet Our Team

Meet our current students and their faculty mentors. Each student works closely with a faculty member throughout their tenure at Northwestern. Browse the Faculty Mentor list to learn more about their research projects and see who is currently recruiting new students.

Current Students    Faculty Mentors

JD-PhD Program

Northwestern's joint JD-PhD program  is a collaboration between The Graduate School and Northwestern Law. It's designed for applicants who are interested in academic careers examining research topics that are enriched by having both JD and PhD degrees.

Visit the JD-PhD Website

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Questions about the PhD program? Find out more.

Read the FAQ

How to Contact Us

To contact the PhD Program in Clinical Psychology, please email us at [email protected] .

Please DO NOT call the number below as it will go to our clinic; it is reserved for patients. Please DO NOT call any other numbers that you may find within the Feinberg School of Medicine. We will only respond to emails that are sent to the following email address: [email protected] . Please DO NOT  contact via phone or email the MD Admissions Office; they are not involved in the admissions process for the PhD program in Clinical Psychology. 

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PhD in Clinical Psychology

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Program Overview

Please see also:

  • Clinical Doctoral Student Handbook (PDF)
  • Student Admissions, Outcomes and Other Data

Licensure Information

Please see details at Consumer Disclosure Information .

The clinical psychology doctoral program at American University aims to prepare students for licensure in many states. Graduating from an American Psychological Association (APA) accredited institution with a doctoral degree is often one of the main requirements for licensure in most states, and our program has been fully and continuously accredited by the APA since 1972. However, most states have other requirements for licensure (e.g., predoctoral internship, postdoctoral fellowship, particular scores on the EPPP licensing exam). This disclosure focuses solely on predoctoral courses needed to qualify for licensure as a psychologist. Graduates of AU’s clinical psychology program have successfully obtained licensure in many states.

The Clinical Psychology PhD program is committed to educating students in clinical science with rigorous training in both research and applied clinical work. Our program will provide you with the skills you need for a successful career in academia, research, or clinical practice. Fully accredited by the American Psychological Association Committee on Accreditation since 1972, our doctoral program reflects the scientist-practitioner model of training.

Excellence in Research and Clinical Training

The 72-credit PhD program is designed to provide students with a rigorous classroom education, innovative research opportunities, and exciting and diverse clinical experiences. With faculty guidance and mentorship, students complete a master's thesis, a doctoral dissertation, and one tool of research. Students engage in four year-long practicum experiences. In the first year, students learn humanistic and psychodynamic techniques in the American University Counseling Center. In later years, students learn and practice behavioral and cognitive techniques in the department's James J. Gray Psychotherapy Training Clinic and the Clinic for Youth Anxiety & Related Disorders. Additionally, students complete multiple externships in DC area hospitals, mental health centers, and counseling centers and a one-year internship.

This program takes five to six years of full-time study to complete. Part-time study is not available. See all degree requirements .

At AU, a mentorship model of training will allow you to work closely with a research supervisor throughout the program. You and this faculty mentor will collaborate on research projects and design your master's thesis and dissertation project. Our faculty members maintain productive research labs and mentor graduate students in research design and methodology. Faculty research interests include affective and motivational processes in depression, anxiety disorders (in children and adults), stress and emotion regulation, parenting, minority mental health, trichotillomania, cognitive assessment and therapy, smoking, borderline personality disorder, drug expectancies, personalization of psychotherapy. Faculty research programs offer a mix of applied and basic research opportunities.

Diverse Opportunities In The Nation's Capital

Home to numerous world-class research and clinical institutions, the DC area offers access to an extraordinary array of professional and intellectual opportunities. The clinical program at AU has fostered connections at a wide range of externship sites including the DC and Baltimore Veterans Affairs Medical Centers, National Institute of Health, Saint Elizabeth’s Hospital, National Children’s Medical Center, private practices, and college counseling centers at nearby universities. Many of our students make lasting connections in the DC area, and are well positioned to find post-doctoral employment in or around the city. There is a rich diversity in DC, so students work with individuals and families from many different backgrounds.

The PhD is your path to career success

At AU, we have a record of placing our clinical psychology PhDs in successful careers at respected institutions. Our students graduate fully prepared for careers in academia, research, and clinical settings. For example, graduates of our program hold tenure-track positions at St. John's University, Williams College, LaFayette College, the University of Cincinnati, and Goucher College.

We are proud of the research and clinical accomplishments of our students and alumni. AU PhDs have conducted research in prominent departments of psychiatry, including Brown University, Ohio State University, and the University of Virginia. Our alumni work in a variety of clinical settings in the DC area and across the country, including Johns Hopkins University, the National Institutes of Health, the New York Presbyterian-University Hospital of Columbia and Cornell, Chestnut Health System of Illinois, Children's National Medical Center, and the District of Columbia VA Medical Center.

News & Notes

Alice Coyne

More News & Notes

  • Alice Coyne  was named the 2024 recipient of the  Society for the Advancement of Psychotherapy Early Career Award  in recognition of “accomplishment and achievement related to psychotherapy theory, practice, research, or training.”

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Alum spotlight, martha falkenstein, cas/phd '16.

Clinical Psychology

I benefitted from being encouraged to pursue my goals — and work/life balance.

Mentored by Dr. David Haaga on treatment development and outcomes for trichotillomania, Martha externed at the DC VA, NIMH Psychiatry Consultation-Liason Service, the Behavior Therapy Center, and Johns Hopkins Medical Center. After a Southwest Consortium Doctoral Internship and post-doc at McLean Hospital/Harvard Medical School, she now serves as Director of Research at the OCD Institute, supported by an NIMH Career Development Award. 

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“I benefitted from being encouraged to pursue my goals — and work/life balance.”

Diana cox, cas/phd candidate.

AU’s quality of education prepared me well for the challenges of clinical work

Diana Cox’s research focuses on how experiences of stress affect physical and mental health outcomes, particularly in LGBTQ+ populations. As a member of the Stress and Emotion Lab, she has had the opportunity to design her own research studies and collaborate with other students on lab projects. She refined her clinical skills through externships at the Washington DC VA Medical Center, Neuropsychology Associates of Fairfax, and True North Therapy.

phd psychology clinical

“AU’s quality of education prepared me well for the challenges of clinical work”

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UCLA Department of Psychology

Clinical Psychology

Mission statement.

Our mission is to advance knowledge that promotes psychological well-being and reduces the burden of mental illness and problems in living and to develop leading clinical scientists whose skills and knowledge will have a substantial impact on the field of psychology and the lives of those in need. Our faculty and graduate students promote critical thinking, innovation, and discovery, and strive to be leaders in their field, engaging in and influencing research, practice, policy, and education. Our pursuit of these goals is guided by the values of collaboration, mutual respect, and fairness, our commitment to diversity, and the highest ethical standards.

Information about the Clinical Psychology Graduate Major

UCLA’s Clinical Psychology program is one of the largest, most selective, and most highly regarded in the country and aims to produce future faculty, researchers, and leaders in clinical science, who influence research, policy development, and practice. Clinical science is a field of psychology that strives to generate and disseminate the best possible knowledge, whether basic or applied, to reduce suffering and to advance public health and wellness. Rather than viewing research and intervention as separable, clinical science construes these activities as part of a single, broad domain of expertise and action. Students in the program are immersed in an empirical, research-based approach to clinical training. This, in turn, informs their research endeavors with a strong understanding of associated psychological phenomena. The UCLA Clinical Science Training Programs employs rigorous methods and theories from multiple perspectives, in the context of human diversity. Our goal is to develop the next generation of clinical scientists who will advance and share knowledge related to the origins, development, assessment, treatment, and prevention of mental health problems.

Admissions decisions are based on applicants’ research interests and experiences, formal coursework in psychology and associated fields, academic performance, letters of recommendation, dedication to and suitability for a career as a clinical scientist, program fit, and contributions to an intellectually rich, diverse class. Once admitted, students engage with faculty in research activities addressing critical issues that impact psychological well-being and the burden of mental illness, using a wide range of approaches and at varying levels of analysis. Their integrated training is facilitated by on-campus resources including the departmental Psychology Clinic, the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, and the David Geffen School of Medicine.

Our program philosophy is embodied in, and our goals are achieved through, a series of training activities that prepare students for increasingly complex, demanding, and independent roles as clinical scientists. These training activities expose students to the reciprocal relationship between scientific research and provision of clinical services, and to various systems and methods of intervention, assessment, and other clinical services with demographically and clinically diverse populations. The curriculum is designed to produce scientifically-minded scholars who are well-trained in research and practice, who use data to develop and refine the knowledge base in their field, and who bring a reasoned empirical perspective to positions of leadership in research and service delivery.

The program’s individualized supervision of each student in integrated research and practice roles provides considerable flexibility. Within the parameters set by faculty interests and practicum resources, there are specializations in child psychopathology and treatment, cognitive-behavior therapy, clinical assessment, adult psychopathology and treatment, family processes, assessment and intervention with distressed couples, community psychology, stress and coping, cognitive and affective neuroscience, minority mental health, and health psychology and behavioral medicine. The faculty and other research resources of the Department make possible an intensive concentration in particular areas of clinical psychology, while at the same time ensuring breadth of training.

Clinical psychology at UCLA is a six-year program including a full-time one-year internship, at least four years of which must be completed in residence at UCLA. The curriculum in clinical psychology is based on a twelve-month academic year. The program includes a mixture of coursework, clinical practicum training, teaching, and continuous involvement in research. Many of the twenty clinical area faculty, along with numerous clinical psychologists from other campus departments, community clinics, and hospitals settings, contribute to clinical supervision.  Clinical training experiences typically include four and a half years of part-time practicum placements in the Psychology Clinic and local agencies. The required one-year full-time internship is undertaken after the student has passed the clinical qualifying examinations and the dissertation preliminary orals. The student receives the Ph.D. degree when both the dissertation and an approved internship are completed.

Accreditation

PCSAS – Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System

The Graduate Program in Clinical Psychology at UCLA was accredited in 2012 by the Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System (PCSAS). PCSAS was created to promote science-centered education and training in clinical psychology, to increase the quality and quantity of clinical scientists contributing to the advancement of public health, and to enhance the scientific knowledge base for mental and behavioral health care. The UCLA program is deeply committed to these goals and proud to be a member of the PCSAS Founder’s Circle and one of the group of programs accredited by PCSAS.  (Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System, 1800 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Suite 402, Washington, DC 20036-1218. Telephone: 301-455-8046). Website:  https://www.pcsas.org

APA CoA – American Psychological Association Commission on Accreditation

The Graduate Program in Clinical Psychology at UCLA has been accredited by the American Psychological Association Commission on Accreditation since 1949. (Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation, American Psychological Association, 750 First Street NE. Washington, DC 20002-4242. Telephone:  202-336-5979 .) Website:  http://www.apa.org/ed/accreditation/

Future Accreditation Plans:  

Against the backdrop of distressing evidence that mental health problems are increasingly prevalent and burdensome, the field of psychological clinical science must think innovatively to address the unmet mental health needs of vulnerable populations. UCLA’s clinical psychology program remains committed to training clinical psychological scientists who will become leaders in research, dissemination, and implementation of knowledge, policy development, and evidence-based clinical practice. This commitment is firmly rooted in our overall mission of promoting equity and inclusion, adhering to ethical standards, and developing collaborations in all aspects of clinical psychology.

Increasingly, we believe that significant aspects of the academic and clinical-service requirements of accreditation by the American Psychological Association (APA) obstruct our training mission. Too often, APA requirements limit our ability to flexibly adapt our program to evolving scientific evidence, student needs, and global trends in mental health. Like many other top clinical science doctoral programs, we see our longstanding accreditation by the Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System (PCSAS) as better aligned with our core values, including advancement of scientifically-based training.

Accordingly, we are unlikely to seek renewal of our program’s accreditation by APA, which is set to expire in 2028. The ultimate decision about re-accreditation will be made with the best interests and well-being of current and future students in our program in mind. To that end, we will continue to monitor important criteria that will determine the career prospects of students completing a doctoral degree in clinical psychology from programs accredited only by PCSAS. For example, we are working to understand the potential implications for securing excellent predoctoral internships and eligibility for professional licensure across jurisdictions in North America. Although the UCLA clinical psychology program has no direct influence over these external organizations, we are excited to continue to work to shape this evolving training landscape with the Academy of Psychological Clinical Science (APCS) and leaders from other clinical science programs.

Our ongoing monitoring of trends in clinical psychology training is encouraging for PCSAS-accredited programs. However, evolving circumstances could result in our program changing its opinion with respect to seeking APA re-accreditation in the future. In the spirit of transparency and empowering potential applicants to make informed choices for their own professional development, we are pleased to share our thinking on these important issues.

Notice to Students re: Professional Licensure and Certification

University of California programs for professions that require licensure or certification are intended to prepare the student for California licensure and certification requirements. Admission into programs for professions that require licensure and certification does not guarantee that students will obtain a license or certificate. Licensure and certification requirements are set by agencies that are not controlled by or affiliated with the University of California and licensure and certification requirements can change at any time.

The University of California has not determined whether its programs meet other states’ educational or professional requirements for licensure and certification. Students planning to pursue licensure or certification in other states are responsible for determining whether, if they complete a University of California program, they will meet their state’s requirements for licensure or certification. This disclosure is made pursuant to 34 CFR §668.43(a)(5)(v)(C).

NOTE:  Although the UCLA Clinical Psychology Program is not designed to ensure license eligibility, the majority of our graduates do go on to become professionally licensed.  For more information, please see  https://www.ucop.edu/institutional-research-academic-planning/content-analysis/academic-planning/licensure-and-certification-disclosures.html .

Clinical Program Policy on Diversity-Related Training 

In light of our guiding values of collaboration, respect, and fairness, this statement is to inform prospective and current trainees, faculty, and supervisors, as well as the public, that our trainees are required to (a) attain an understanding of cultural and individual diversity as related to both the science and practice of psychology and (b) provide competent and ethical services to diverse individuals.  Our primary consideration is always the welfare of the client.  Should such a conflict arise in which the trainee’s beliefs, values, worldview, or culture limits their ability to meet this requirement, as determined by either the student or the supervisor, it should be reported to the Clinic and Placements Committee, either directly or through a supervisor or clinical area faculty member.  The Committee will take a developmental view, such that if the competency to deliver services cannot be sufficiently developed in time to protect and serve a potentially impacted client, the committee will (a) consider a reassignment of the client so as to protect the client’s immediate interests, and (b) request from the student a plan to reach the above-stated competencies, to be developed and implemented in consultation with both the trainee’s supervisor and the Clinic Director.  There should be no reasonable expectation of a trainee being exempted from having clients with any particular background or characteristics assigned to them for the duration of their training.

Clinical Program Grievance Policies & Procedures

Unfortunately, conflicts between students and faculty or with other students will occur, and the following policies and procedures are provided in an effort to achieve the best solution. The first step in addressing these conflicts is for the student to consult with their academic advisor. If this option is not feasible (e.g. the conflict is with the advisor) or the conflict is not resolved to their satisfaction, then the issue should be brought to the attention of the Director of Clinical Training. If in the unlikely event that an effective solution is not achieved at this level, then the student has the option of consulting with the Department’s Vice Chair for Graduate Studies. Students also have the option of seeking assistance from the campus Office of Ombuds Services and the Office of the Dean of Students. It is expected that all such conflicts are to be addressed first within the program, then within the Department, before seeking a resolution outside of the department.

More Clinical Psychology Information

  • For a list of Required Courses please see the  Psychology Handbook
  • Psychology Clinic
  • Student Admissions Outcomes and Other Data

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Clinical Program

Ph.d. program in clinical psychology.

Please note that the Graduate and Clinical Handbooks contain a great deal of information about the Clinical Program and should be read in full.

About the Program

Established in 1947 and accredited by the APA since 1948, the PhD program in clinical psychology at Boston University has a long and distinguished history. As part of the Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, the program is committed to the pursuit of a science-based approach to psychology.  The clinical-scientist model serves as the basis of our training program that prepares graduates for a wide range of careers in academic, medical, and applied settings.

Mission Statement

The Boston University PhD Program in Clinical Psychology was one of the first twelve programs approved by the American Psychological Association in 1948. The program places clinical science at the foundation of training goals and objectives.  As such, graduates of the program are expected to be competent in psychological research and to be knowledgeable about the scientific bases of clinical psychology applications, such as assessment and intervention.

Our goal is to help students develop skills in research and science-based clinical practice as well as the critical thinking skills and abilities necessary to integrate these domains. Within this framework, we emphasize a mentorship model of teaching that provides experiential learning and supervision in clinical research and professional practice settings.  Key training components include the development of independent research skills, clinical training at sites with psychologists who integrate science and practice, and course content informed by current research. This multipronged training is consistent with the University’s mission of developing outstanding scientists and researchers in all the disciplines in which graduate degrees are offered, while ensuring that graduates are competent to use these skills in applied clinical settings. The presentation of didactic material through courses, participation in clinical research, and clinical training experiences follow a sequence that reflects increasing complexity and effective integration of the subject matter, and promotes increasing autonomy in our graduate students.

The program accepts a small number of students each year with class sizes seldom exceeding ten students. Given the clinical science focus of the BU program, applicants who are solely interested in careers in clinical practice may better achieve their objectives at a professional school in psychology. The overarching goal of the program is to give our graduates the background necessary to implement evidence-based practices and programs in applied settings, develop sophisticated program evaluation methodologies, create new basic and applied knowledge in clinical research settings whether in universities or agencies, and innovate policy relevant to the practice of clinical psychology. Our graduates typically follow career paths in academic and medical settings. Some examples from graduates in the last several years include academic or clinical research positions at Brown University Medical School, Harvard University Medical School, Boston University School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles School of Medicine, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, University of New Hampshire, Suffolk University, University of Waterloo, and the University of New South Wales (Australia). In addition, a number of graduates have also obtained leadership positions in clinical settings including Director of Addiction Ambulatory Services at Bronx Lebanon Hospital / MLK Jr. Health Center in New York, and Program Director, Polytrauma Transitional Rehabilitation Program, Palo Alto VA. Whatever the setting, the program philosophy emphasizes training that will produce clinical scientists who will become leaders and innovators in academic and applied settings with clinical science as the foundation of their work.

Accreditation

The Boston University Clinical Psychology Doctoral Program has been accredited by the American Psychological Association since 1948. Questions regarding accreditation can be addressed to the APA Commission on Accreditation :

Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation American Psychological Association 750 First Street NE Washington, DC 20002 (202) 336-5979

The Boston University Clinical Psychology Doctoral Program has also been accredited by the Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System (PCSAS) since June 2017, continuing through 2026. Questions regarding accreditation can be addressed to:

Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System Joseph E. Steinmetz, Ph.D., Executive Director 1101 E 10 th Street Bloomington, IN 47408 (479) 301-8008 [email protected]

“PCSAS is an independent, non-profit organization that provides rigorous, objective, and empirically based accreditation of Ph.D. programs. PCSAS programs adhere to a clinical science training model — one that supports and expands the scientific foundation for mental and behavioral health care and increases the quality and quantity of clinical scientists contributing to all aspects of public health for all people.”

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PhD in Clinical Psychology

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pictured alum: Dr. Emily Eccles, Class of 2020

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Program Director

Connie Veazey, PhD

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Fielding’s doctoral program in Clinical Psychology is accredited by the American Psychological Association. It is the only distributed learning program accredited by the APA. The Psychology PhD serves adults, many of whom who have trained or worked in the mental health field. Our unique distributed learning model blends the best of in-person learning opportunities with digital formats.

Questions related to the program’s accredited status should be directed to the Commission on Accreditation: Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation American Psychological Association 750 1st Street, NE, Washington, DC 20002 Phone: (202) 336-5979 / E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.apa.org/ed/accreditation

For questions regarding the Clinical Psychology PhD Program contact [email protected].

About the Clinical Psychology Program

Application requirements.

Earning your doctorate in Clinical Psychology includes online and in-person seminars, meetings with faculty and other students in your region, weeklong residential sessions, as well as research and clinical training experiences.

The unique mix of online and residential learning provides flexible opportunities for individuals with career, family, and community responsibilities to achieve their advanced educational goals. Faculty are active scholars and practitioners with a wide variety of expertise, making it possible to offer training in a variety of therapeutic orientations and specialized concentrations in some of the most exciting growth areas of psychology.

  • Conferred Bachelor’s Degree
  • Minimum GPA of 3.0
  • Online Application Form
  • Curriculum Vitae (CV)
  • Statement of Purpose
  • Critical Thinking Writing Sample
  • 3 Letters of Recommendation
  • Official Transcript
  • No GRE Required

Start your application NOW!  

Apply now for fall 2025, student admissions, outcomes, and other data.

In accordance with requirements of the American Psychological Association (APA), Fielding Graduate University provides Student Admissions, Outcomes, and Other Data pertaining to the education of our graduate students.

The Fielding Experience

  • Become a member of a dynamic and diverse community of colleagues
  • Interact with and learn from our expert faculty located all across the country
  • Attend monthly professional development seminar in your geographic area
  • Engage with alumni, faculty, and other students at sessions

Mission & Aims of the Program

Fielding’s APA accredited Clinical Psychology Ph.D. program is strongly aligned with the university’s mission to create a more humane, just, and sustainable world, and the university’s values that include academic excellence, community, diversity, and social justice.

Consistent with these values, a core mission of our program is to foster the inclusion of students from under-represented populations. These populations include students living in small communities, rural, or remote locations of the United States, students currently in the military or spouses of military members, adult learners with families, and students whose ongoing participation in their current communities cannot be halted for doctoral study elsewhere. These are student populations who are often unable to enter the field through preparation at a traditional university campus, yet these are the future psychologists for which the discipline and profession have expressed an urgent need.

In addition, our program aims to graduate entry-level scholar-practitioner psychologists who bring social justice values to their work as licensed health service professionals. Consistent with this overarching aim, we have four specific aims for our students, which must be achieved by the time of graduation.

  • Students will demonstrate doctoral-level discipline-specific knowledge that represents the scientific and theoretical knowledge areas of the discipline of psychology (i.e., history and systems of psychology and the affective, biological, cognitive, developmental, and social bases of behavior).
  • Students will demonstrate doctoral-level conceptualization, evaluation, analysis, and integration of discipline-specific knowledge across the curriculum.
  • Students will demonstrate doctoral-level ability to understand and critique research; design, conduct, analyze, and communicate theoretically informed research; and conduct research in a manner that is culturally sensitive and consistent with legal code and ethical standards, including the APA ethics code.
  • Students will demonstrate doctoral-level competence in the profession-wide competencies, including conducting an evidence-based diagnosis, assessment, and psychotherapy; and applying theory and research to develop case conceptualizations, treatment plans, and interventions that are consistent with legal and ethical standards and individual and cultural diversity factors.

Serving adults, many of whom have trained or worked in the mental health field, our unique distributed learning model blends the best of face-to-face learning opportunities with digital formats.

Faculty are active scholars and practitioners with a wide variety of expertise, which allows us to offer specialized concentrations and training in a variety of therapeutic orientations.

Geographic Eligibility

The program only considers applicants who reside in the contiguous United States and Canada. The program is not available to those residing internationally (except Canada). Applicants from Alaska and Hawaii may be considered pending confirmation of their ability and resources to attend local professional development seminars in contiguous U.S. on a regular basis, access to acceptable practicum training sites, and ability to relocate for internship. (Contact [email protected] to be put in touch with the Program Director for consideration prior to applying.)

Due to state licensing requirements, graduates of the program are not eligible for licensure in Oklahoma. For licensure information on your particular state of interest, please visit our Professional Licensure page [CLICK HERE].

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Psychology, PhD (Clinical)

On this page:.

Clinical psychology is the psychological specialty that provides continuing and comprehensive mental and behavioral health care for individuals and families; consultation to agencies and communities; training, education and supervision; and research-based practice.

Program Description

Degree Awarded: Psychology, PhD

There are multiple training models in Clinical Psychology (Scientist-Practitioner, Practitioner-Scholar, Clinical Science) and these models reflect the relative focus on research and clinical training. The Clinical Psychology Program at ASU adheres to the Clinical Science training model, which is the most research focused. Thus, although students in our program receive excellent clinical training, the focus is on producing Clinical Scientists who will work in setting that take full advantage of their research as well as clinical skills (e.g., Academia, Medical Centers, VA Hospitals). 

Our mission is to prepare students for professional careers in a variety of settings where they engage in research, teaching, or clinical supervision; and who make contributions to clinical science by disseminating research findings and scholarship. Within this general mission of providing high-quality, science-based training, we strive to prepare a significant number of graduates who establish careers in academia and research institutes where they have primary responsibilities for conducting research that advances clinical science and for teaching new generations of clinical scientists. 

The success of our students in meeting program goals is evident based on a) the high rate of students matching in APA accredited internships (40 of 40; 100% in the past 7 years), b) our recent graduates’ success in passing the national licensing exam (100% based on publicly available data from ASPPB), and the high percentage of our recent graduates who have obtained licensure (39 of 44; 88.6% of our recent graduates who are 5 or more years beyond graduation). Although we continue to emphasize high quality clinical training and strongly believe in the reciprocal nature of research and clinical training, we identify with the “Clinical Science” training model based on the long-term goals of our program which are primarily to train clinical scientists rather than individuals who elect to work as full-time practitioners. Outcomes of our alumni survey (students at least five years post-graduation) provide support for our success in achieving Clinical Science outcomes, with 40 of 44 (90.9%) making scholarly/research contributions since graduation from our program.

Our data on graduates from the past 10 years show diversity in their professional activities that is consistent with our clinical science training and special emphases that can be acquired at ASU.  Among those beyond postdoctoral training (n = 54), 40.7% are in academic settings, 33.3% are in clinical or combined research and clinical positions in medical schools/centers, VA hospitals, or other hospital settings, 22.2% are in other practice environments such as mental health centers or private practices, and 3.7% are in government settings (e.g., public health, DoD). These data suggest that our training leads to career trajectories that are consistent with the program’s philosophy and goals.

The Psychology PhD program in the clinical psychology training area is:

  • based upon a clinical science model of training;
  • fully accredited  by the American Psychological Association (APA) and the Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System (PCSAS);
  • a member of the Academy of Psychological Clinical Science;
  • a PhD (doctoral) program only;
  • designed so that students who were admitted with a bachelor’s degree can finish the requirements in six years including a one-year, full-time internship;
  • organized to allow students to begin practicum training in the program’s second year;
  • best able to serve the educational needs of students with deep interests in empirical research; and
  • highly competitive — in the last several years we have admitted between 3 and 10 new students per year from a pool of 200 to 300 applicants.

IMPORTANT: To be considered for this PhD program, you must complete the application through ASU's online portal AND submit your material through  Slideroom

Important links:

Faculty   Data and Resources   Financial Support   Research Labs

Student Handbook

Concentrations

Focus Areas

The Clinical Training Program has three areas of emphases in which students may elect to participate:  health psychology ,  child clinical psychology,  and  community/prevention .

Thus, the descriptions that follow are designed to give you an idea of the available curricular choices.

Child Clinical Area of Emphasis

The child clinical area of emphasis provides training in the etiology, assessment, treatment and prevention of childhood disorders. A major focus is on the prevention of child mental health problems among children and families under stress. Thus, most of our child clinical faculty also participate in our community-prevention area of emphasis. Table of Child Clinical Faculty. 

Health Psychology Area of Emphasis

Clinical students with interests centering on the interface of psychology and medicine may select Health Psychology as an area of emphasis. In our program, health psychology is broadly interpreted to encompass the theoretical, methodological, and/or procedural (treatment and prevention) contributions from contemporary psychology that bear upon the existing and emerging problems of modern medicine.  Table of Health Psychology Faculty.

Community/Prevention Area of Emphasis

We define the Community/Preventive area of emphasis to include theory, research methods, and interventions that are designed to prevent the occurrence of mental health, substance use or other problems, and to promote healthy adaptation in a range of social environments. Students study theoretical issues such as the influence of stress and coping, family processes, acculturation and cross-cultural issues, neighborhood influences, and economic hardship on the development of mental health or substance abuse problems. Students also become involved in the development, implementation, and evaluation of preventive interventions to promote healthy adaptation for children in a range of high-risk situations. Foci of preventive interventions include children of divorce, inner-city ethnic minority children, bereaved children, and school-based programs.  Table of Community/Prevention Clinical Faculty. 

Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging

The Psychology Doctoral Program at Arizona State University embraces the University’s charter encouraging diversity, equity, and inclusion in all aspects of our program.  We strive to create a community that reflects and celebrates the diversity of society-at-large because we believe it is essential to attaining academic excellence, professional development, and personal growth. To that end, we are dedicated to training early career scientists from diverse backgrounds, and we encourage applications from students from backgrounds historically underrepresented in the sciences, including but not limited to BIPOC, LGBTQIA+, first generation college students, and those from lower socioeconomic backgrounds.

Coursework for the doctoral program is to some extent, determined by APA requirements. For more detailed information about the program's curriculum and milestones or to see a sample schedule, students should view the current Clinical Student Handbook. Once admitted, we require students to be continuously enrolled full-time, excluding summer sessions, until all degree requirements have been met.

A minimum of 84 hours is required. 

Core courses

27

Electives

9

Substantive coursework

6

Milestone courses

24

Dissertation and Research

18

Total hours required

84

Courses and electives

The coursework for each student is individualized and based upon the student's previous training, research goals and mentor. All students are required to complete 27 credit hours of core courses that cover the scientific and technical foundations of clinical psychology. Students will also choose elective courses that more closely align to their specific focus area. In order to satisfy program accreditation, students will take one course in biological bases of behavior, social bases of behavior, cognitive bases of behavior, affective bases of behavior and in human development. Additional requirements include two ATM courses are required which involve integrated science-professional training and are taught by departmental faculty in timely and specific clinical and community modalities.

At a Glance

  • Location:  Tempe campus
  • Second Language Requirement:  No

Degree Requirements

The 84-hour program of study includes a written comprehensive exam, an oral comprehensive, a prospectus and a dissertation. Prospective doctoral candidates should have a passion and interest in clinical psychology, have demonstrated research skills in a senior thesis, have a minimum of a 3.00 cumulative GPA.

Student Admissions, Outcomes & Other Data  

Accreditation Status

ASU's Public Disclosure on Licensure Statement

Admission Requirements

Our selection of new doctoral students is based on several factors:

  • academic excellence;
  • strong undergraduate preparation in psychology;
  • experience in conducting psychological research;
  • compatibility with research interests of our faculty;
  • evidence of strong research skills; and
  • personal characteristics that are suitable for teaching and the provision of psychological services to the public.

In addition to significant research experience, successful applicants should have an undergraduate grade point average of B+ or better and compelling letters of recommendation. Specific information about application procedures can be found on the  doctoral admissions  pages.

We also seek a balance of students who have interests in our three research emphases: child clinical, health, and community/prevention. It has been our experience that most of our students will choose one of the three specialty areas which represent domains of faculty interest as well as clinical or preventive specialties for which an employment demand now exists. However, specialization is not a program requirement. Some students might begin a particular emphasis but later decide to move in a different direction. 

Required Core Content (27 units)

Required Core Courses:  Courses covering the scientific and technical foundations of clinical psychology, as well as clinical practica include:

  • PSY 530 Analysis of Variance (Intermediate Statistics)
  • PSY 531 Multiple Regression
  • PSY 573 Psychopathology
  • PSY 578 Developmental Psychopathology (required for child emphasis only)
  • PSY 600 Clinical Research Methods
  • PSY 574/591  Psychotherapy or Child and Family Therapy
  • PSY 780  Psychological Assessment or Assessment Advanced Treatment Methods (ATM)
  • PSY 591 Clinical Interviewing and Ethics
  • Practicum I and II 

Electives (6-27 units)

Electives:  Various courses, seminars, and practica of the students’ choosing are included in this category and are used to satisfy additional program requirements.

Required Accreditation Courses (6-27 credit hours)

In order to satisfy requirements for program accreditation, students are also required to take at least one course each in:

  • Biological Bases of Behavior:  PSY 591 Psychopharmacology  or  PSY 591 Biological Bases of Behavior  or  PSY 591 Advanced Neurobiology of Cognition
  • Social Bases of Behavior:   PSY 550 Advanced Social Psychology: Interpersonal Processes  or  PSY 551 Advanced Social Psychology: Intrapersonal Processes
  • Cognitive Bases of Behavior:   PSY 535 Cognitive Processes  or  PSY 591 Embodied Cognition  or  PSY 541 Research in Cognitive Development.*
  • Affective Bases of Behavior:   PSY 591 Emotions  or  PSY 542 Social Emotional Development*  or  PSY 591 Emotional Development*  or  PSY 591 Emotions, Stress and Health  or  PSY 598 Socio-emotional Development
  • Human Development:  PSY 541 Research in Cognitive Development*  or  PSY 542 Social Emotional Development*  or  PSY 591 Emotional Development*  or  PSY 591 Children’s Peer Relationships  or  PSY 591Resilience Processes in Development  or  PSY 598 Developmental Transitions.

*PSY 542 and PSY 591 can only be used to either fulfill the Affective Bases of behavior requirement OR to fulfill the Human Development requirement. PSY 541 can only be used to fulfill the Cognitive Bases of behavior requirement OR the Human Development requirement.

  • History and Systems:  PSY 591 History of Psychology  or  PSY 591 Clinical Issues Seminar: History and Systems of Psychology

Substantive Curriculum (6-27 credit hours)

Other Course Requirements:  Two ATM courses are required which involve integrated science-professional training and are taught by departmental faculty in timely and specific clinical and community modalities.

  • PSY 780  All topics listed as ATMs in Psychology.  The Assessment ATM also meets the requirement for Psychological Assessment
  • PSY 501  Supervised Teaching (can count for 1 of 2 ATMs)

Master's Thesis and Research (12 credit hours) - For Master's in passing

  • PSY 592 - Master's Research (6 credit hours) Independent study in which a student, under the supervision of a faculty member, conducts research that is expected to lead to a specific project such as a thesis or dissertation, report, or publication. Assignments might include data collection, experimental work, data analysis, or preparation of a manuscript
  • PSY 599 - Master's Thesis (6 credit hours) Supervised research focused on preparation of thesis, including literature review, research, data collection and analysis, and writing.

Dissertation and Research (18 credit hours)

  • PSY 792 Dissertation Research (6 credit hours) Independent study in which a student, under the supervision of a faculty member, conducts research that is expected to lead to a specific project such as a dissertation, report, or publication. Assignments might include data collection, experimental work, data analysis, or preparation of a manuscript.
  • PSY 799 Dissertation (12 Credit Hours) Supervised research focused on preparation of dissertation, including literature review, research, data collection and analysis, and writing.

Sample Schedule: General

Listed below is a sample schedule. Note that, although we outline a five-year sequence in which the degree can be completed, most students finish the degree in six years including internship.

 YEAR ONE

 Fall (12 credits)

 + Analysis of Variance

+ Psychotherapy (if offered)

+ History and Systems (if no Psychotherapy)

+ Psychopathology

+ Research (3)

Spring (12 credits)

 + Multiple Regression

+ Clinical Interviewing and Ethics

+ Clinical Research Methods

+ Research (3)

YEAR TWO

 Fall (12 credits)

 + MA Thesis (3)

+ Clinical Practicum I

+ Multivariate Statistics

+ Assessment ATM or Psychological Assessment

Spring (12 credits)

+ MA Thesis (3)

+ Clinical Practicum II

+ Psychotherapy (if not offered in Year 1)

+ History & Systems (if Psychotherapy in Year 1)

+ Elective (Biological Bases of Behavior)

YEAR THREE

Fall (12 credits)

+ Elective (Cognitive Bases of Behavior)

+ Elective (Affective Bases of Behavior)

+ Research (3)

+ Dissertation Research (3)

(1/4 time clinical placement)

Spring (12 credits)

+ Elective (Human Development)

+ ATM

+ Research (3)

+ Dissertation Research (3)

(1/4 time clinical placement)

YEAR FOUR

Fall (9 credits)

+ Elective (Social Bases of Behavior)

+ Dissertation Research (3)

+ Elective

(1/4 time clinical placement)

Spring (9 credits)

+ ATM

+ Dissertation Research (3)

+ Elective

(1/4 time clinical placement)

YEAR FIVE

 Fall (1 credit)

 + Internship

Spring (1 credit)

 + Internship

Sample Schedule: Clinical Child Emphasis

SAMPLE SCHEDULE:  CHILD CLINICAL EMPHASIS

Listed below is a sample schedule for students who chose a child clinical emphasis. Note that, although we outline a five-year sequence in which the degree can be completed, most students finish the degree in six years including internship.

YEAR ONE

 Fall (12 credits)

 + Analysis of Variance

+ Developmental Psychopathology

+ Psychopathology

+ Research (3)

Spring (12 credits)

+ Multiple Regression

+ Clinical Interviewing and Ethics

+ Clinical Research Methods

+ Child and Family Therapy (if offered)

+ Research (3) if C&F Therapy not offered

YEAR TWO

 Fall (12 credits)

+ MA Thesis (3)

+ Clinical Practicum I

+ Multivariate Statistics

+ Assessment ATM or Psychological Assessment

Spring (12 credits)

+ MA Thesis (3)

+ Clinical Practicum II

+ Child and Family Therapy (if not offered Year 1)

+ Research (3) (if C&F Therapy in Year 1)

+ Elective (History and Systems)

YEAR THREE

Fall (12 credits)

+ Elective (Biological Bases of Behavior)

+ Elective (Affective Bases of Behavior)

+ Research (3)

+ Dissertation Research (3)

(1/4 time clinical placement)

Spring (12 credits)

+ Elective (Human Development)

+ ATM

+ Research (3)

+ Dissertation Research (3)

(1/4 time clinical placement)

YEAR FOUR

Fall (9 credits)

+ Elective (Social Bases of Behavior)

+ Elective (Cognitive Bases of Behavior)

+ Dissertation Research (3)

(1/4 time clinical placement)

 Spring (9 credits)

+ ATM

+ Dissertation Research (3)

+ Elective

(1/4 time clinical placement)

YEAR FIVE

 Fall (1 credit)

 + Internship

 Spring (1 credit)

 + Internship

Financial Support

The Department of Psychology typically pays ASU tuition for full-time doctoral students with 20 hour-per-week graduate teaching or research assistantships. Tuition and fee information can be found on the ASU's  general tuition webpage .

An appointment as a 50% Graduate Teaching Assistant (TA) for the 2024-2025 academic year (9-month TA) provides financial support in the form of a stipend in the amount of $24,586 for the academic year.

Fellowships and awards

Doctoral students are encouraged to apply for fellowships through the National Institutes of Health  National Research Service Award  program and through the National Science Foundation's  Graduate Research Fellowship Program . Other funding opportunities exist within specific areas of study and doctoral students should explore these possibilities with their faculty advisor/mentor.

In addition to government and external organizational fellowships, the Department of Psychology currently offers  graduate scholar awards  of $1,500 each to two students in any psychology doctoral program area in any year of study. Made possible by the generous donations of department faculty and others, these awards are intended to recognize the accomplishments of students who are demonstrating overall excellence in the psychology doctoral program. Excellence will be judged with respect to contributions to psychological science; and/or the teaching of psychology; and/or community involvement reflecting application of psychological knowledge. The deadline for all application materials, including a letter of support from a psychology faculty member, is typically mid-March.

Two other fellowship awards are also available to the department's doctoral students through endowed scholarships: The Robert B. Cialdini Dissertation Project Prize and the Martha E. Bernal Memorial Scholarship Award Endowment. Doctoral students in the developmental psychology and social psychology may similarly apply for endowed fellowships within their program areas.

Financial aid

There is no financial aid available through the department although such aid is available through the ASU Financial Aid and Scholarship Services; visit their  site  to explore financial aid opportunities.

Next Steps to Attend ASU

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Global Opportunities

With over 250 programs in more than 65 countries (ranging from one week to one year), study abroad is possible for all ASU students wishing to gain global skills and knowledge in preparation for a 21st-century career. Students earn ASU credit for completed courses, while staying on track for graduation, and may apply financial aid and scholarships toward program costs.

Request Information

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Clinical Psychology PhD

phd psychology clinical

The PhD in Clinical Psychology is an American Psychological Association (APA) accredited program, and also a program member of the Council of University Directors of Clinical Psychology (CUDCP). The program adheres to the scientist/practitioner model of training, and requires a number of clinical and research practica in addition to an extensive course curriculum.

  • It is a four-year plus internship, full-time program.
  • It emphasizes a thorough preparation in theoretical psychology and methodology.
  • Theoretical foundations in personality and psychopathology are explored prior to behavioral and personality assessment.
  • Concurrent with the work in assessment, students begin study of the theory, research, and practice of psychotherapy.

The Commission on Accreditation of the American Psychological Association can be contacted at:

Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation  American Psychological Association  750 1st Street, NE, Washington, DC 20002  Phone: (202) 336-5979 / E-mail:  [email protected]   Web:  www.apa.org/ed/accreditation   

Admission requirements

This program is open to applications from those who hold an undergraduate degree in psychology or have taken the required number of psychology credits (18). The requirement of 18 undergraduate credits includes statistics and 15 additional credits, preferably introductory psychology, developmental psychology, experimental psychology, and social psychology.

Students are selected from a pool of academically qualified applicants who can contribute to the diversity of the student body. Students enrolled in the clinical psychology program come from diverse ethnic, cultural, individual and experiential backgrounds. Applications are encouraged from those identifying with cultural and/or individual areas of diversity, including (but not limited to) age, disability, ethnicity, gender, gender identity, language, national origin, race, religion, culture, sexual orientation, and socioeconomic status.

Acceptance decisions are based on outstanding undergraduate and (where applicable) graduate academic performance, evidence of scholarly activity such as publications and paper presentations, prior work experience, the personal statement, and letters of recommendation. 

The deadline for application for admission to the PhD program is December 15, 2023.

NOTE: The FDU application fee for the 2023-2024 application cycle has been waived.

To apply to this program , complete an application through the psychology common application PSYCAS .

This application should be used only to apply for the PhD in Clinical Psychology. Your application to the PhD program will not be considered complete unless you submit the following through PSYCAS:

  • all official undergraduate and graduate transcripts,
  • three letters of recommendation,
  • a personal statement,
  • official GRE aptitude and psychology test score reports. The psychology GRE is optional for those who majored in psychology as an undergraduate or attained an advanced degree in psychology. 

Degree plan

1st semester.

  • PSYC6112      Clinical Research Methods & Psychometrics
  • PSYC6114      Psychopathology
  • PSYC6116      History & Systems
  • PSYC6118      Computer Application in Statistics Lab
  • PSYC6132      Developmental Issues in Clinical Psychology
  • PSYC6180      First-Year Clinical Practicum I

2nd Semester

  • PSYC6122      Personality Assessment
  • PSYC6133      Intellectual Assessment
  • PSYC6160      Teaching Seminar (1 credit)
  • PSYC6624      Introduction to Psychotherapy
  • PSYC6181      First-Year Clinical Practicum II: Ethics
  • PSYC7120      Diversity Issues in Clinical Psychology

3rd Semester

  • PSYC7110      Research Design & Analysis I
  • PSYC7113      Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
  • PSYC7121      Cognitive Behavior Therapy
  • PSYC7180      Second-Year Clinical Practicum I
  • PSYC____     ASTCP_________

4th Semester

  • PSYC7111      Research Design & Analysis II
  • PSYC7125      Applied Social Psychology
  • PSYC7130      Biological Bases of Behavior
  • PSYC7181      Second-Year Clinical Practicum II
  • PSYC____     ASTCP______________

5th Semester

  • PSYC7133      Learning, Cognition, and Emotion
  • PSYC8129      Psychopharmacology
  • PSYC8180      Third-Year Clinical Practicum I

6th Semester

  • PSYC9124      Advanced Research Seminar (1 credit)
  • PSYC9138      Professional Development
  • PSYC8181      Third-Year Clinical Practicum II

ASTCP (4 REQUIRED)

ADV PSYCHODYNAMIC (2 nd , 3 rd years) SPRING.

CHILD CLINICAL (offered every other year; alternates with Family; open to 2 nd ,3 rd years)

FAMILY THERAPY (2 nd ,3 rd years)

CLINICAL CASE (3 rd year) SPRING

NEUROPSYCH (Fall every odd year; open to 2 nd ,3 rd years)

ADVANCED PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT (Fall, every other even year, open to 2 nd , 3 rd years)

ADVANCED CBT (open to 2 nd , 3 rd years)

Advanced special topics in clinical psychology, 4 required

A class will run if there are sufficient enrollment numbers to support it.

  • PSYC8114      Neuropsychology (offered even years in the fall; open to second- and third-year students)
  • PSYC9160      Advanced Personality Assessment (offered odd years in the fall; open to second- and third- year students)
  • PSYC8127      Clinical Child Psychology (offered  odd years  in the spring; open to second- and third- year students)
  • PSYC8145      Advanced Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (offered in the fall; open to third-year students only)
  • PSYC9143      Advanced Psychodynamic Therapy (offered in the spring; open to third-year students only)
  • PSYC9145      Seminar in Clinical Psychology (offered in the spring; open to third-year students only)
  • PSYC9123 Family Therapy (offered even years in the spring; open to second- and third- year students)

Additional optional coursework and independent studies

  • PSYC9112      Dissertation Maintenance (summer)
  • PSYC9113      Internship Maintenance (summer)
  • PSYC9116      Research Maintenance (summer)
  • PSYC9180      4th Year Practicum I (fall)
  • PSYC9181      4th Year Practicum II (spring)
  • PSYC9280      5th Year Clinical Practicum I (fall)
  • PSYC9281      5th Year Practicum II (spring)
  • PSYC9800      Independent Study

Special requirements

  • First Year Research Practicum
  • First Year Clinical Practicum
  • Second Year Research practicum
  • Second Year Clinical practicum
  • Second Year Project
  • Third Year Research practicum
  • Third Year Clinical practicum
  • Teaching Requirement
  • Dissertation Accepted
  • Qualifying Examination
  • Comprehensive Examination

Internship and dissertation

Students are required to apply for internship via the national match system offered by the Association of Psychology Postdoctoral and Internship Centers (APPIC) and participate in an approved internship. The internship may begin after the student has completed the courses listed under the first six semesters, completed the second year research project, passed the comprehensive examinations, and successfully defended the dissertation proposal. Typically, the dissertation is completed in the fourth year and the internship in the fifth year.

Evaluations

Ongoing annual evaluations of students will be conducted by the faculty using information submitted by practicum site supervisors, course instructors, and research mentors. Students will meet with the Program Director to receive feedback concerning these evaluations.

Research practicum

All first-, second- and third-year students participate in a research practicum of ongoing projects supervised by doctoral faculty members. The practicum requires approximately 8-10 hours a week. Research projects frequently culminate in the publication of articles in psychological journals and paper and poster presentations at various professional meetings, with students in the doctoral program participating as authors and presenters.

Forensic Track

An optional add-on forensic track is available to students in the Ph.D. program who fulfill the following additional requirements:

  • Completion of at least one of the required clinical practicums at any point after the first year. This requirement can be satisfied through an NYNJDOT approved externship or similar placement meeting requirements of the track.
  • Completion of at least two additional courses: PSYC7230 Forensic Assessment and Prediction and PSYC7235 Evaluating Criminal Responsibility and Competency.
  • Completion of a dissertation on a forensic topic.

It should be noted that research opportunities in forensic psychology are available.

Forensic track courses may incur additional fees if they increase a student’s credit load for a given semester above the allowable flat fee level of 16.5 credits.

Students coming into the program without a Master’s degree may incur additional fees for the two courses mentioned above since they are above and beyond the required courses for the clinical doctoral program.

Completion of the forensic track will be noted on the student’s transcript.

  • Long Island Jewish Medical Center—The Zucker Hillside Hospital; Glen Oaks, NY
  • Veterans Affairs Medical Center—Bronx, NY
  • Institute of Living/Hartford Hospital; Hartford, CT
  • NYU Lagone Medical Center (Rusk Inst of Rehab Medicine); NY, NY
  • Hudson River Regional Psychology; Poughkeepsie, NY
  • Trinitas Regional Medical Center; Elizabeth, NJ
  • Albert Einstein College of Medicine—Montefiore Medical Center; Bronx, NY
  • Maimonides Medical Center; Brooklyn, NY
  • Coler-Goldwater Specialty Hospital and Nursing Facility; Roosevelt Island, NY
  • NYU Langone Medical Center (Rusk Inst of Rehab Medicine)-child/adol track; NY, NY
  • UMDNJ UBHCH; Newark, NJ
  • Westchester Jewish Community Services, Inc.; White Plains, NY
  • Veterans Affairs New Jersey Health Care System; Lyons, NJ
  • Hudson River Regional Psychology Internship Program; Poughkeepsie, NY
  • UMDNJ UBHCN (Child Track); Newark, NJ
  • Mercy First; Syosset, NY
  • University of New Mexico School of Medicine (Neuropsychology); Albuquerque, NM
  • University of Massachusetts Center for Counseling and Psychological Health; Amherst, MA
  • Columbia University Medical Center (child track); NY, NY
  • Boston Consortium in Clinical Psychology (General Geriatric Neuropsych); Boston, MA
  • Association for the Help of Retarded Children Dept of Family and Clinical Services; NY, NY
  • VA NY Harbor Health Care System—Brooklyn Campus; Brooklyn, NY
  • US Dept of Justice Metropolitan Detention Center; Los Angeles, CA
  • Lenox Hill Hospital; NY, NY
  • Children’s National Medical Center; Washington, DC
  • University of Florida Health Science Center; Gainesville, FL
  • Mount Sinai Services; Elmhurst, NY
  • Yale University School of Medicine; New Haven, CT
  • Queens Children’s Psychiatric Center; Bellerose, NY
  • VAMC—North Chicago; North Chicago, IL
  • Institute of Living/Hartford Hospital’s Mental Health Network (Adult Track); Hartford, CT
  • Temple University Health Sciences Center; Philadelphia, PA
  • Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital; Morris Plains, NJ
  • Institute of Living/Hartford Hospital’s Mental Health Network (Child/Adol Track); Hartford, CT
  • Charleston Consortium Psychology Internship Program; Charleston, SC
  • Interfaith Medical Center; Brooklyn, NY
  • UCSD Psychology Internship Consortium/Veterans Affairs; San Diego, CA
  • Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Denver; Denver, CO
  • Columbia University Medical Center; NY, NY
  • Mount Sinai Medical Center; NY, NY
  • Univ. of S. Carolina, Counseling & Human Development Center; Columbia, SC
  • VA Maryland Health Care System (Neuropsych); Baltimore, MD
  • Astor Services for Children and Families; Poughkeepsie, NY
  • Jewish Board of Family and Children’s Services, Inc.; NY, NY
  • VA Hudson Valley Healthcare System—Montrose Campus; Montrose, NY
  • Kings County Hospital Center (Adult Track); Brooklyn, NY
  • Jewish Child Care Association of NY; Pleasantville, NY
  • Louis Stokes Cleveland DVA Medical Center; Cleveland, OH
  • NYU—Bellevue Hospital Center Clinical Psych.; NY, NY
  • American Institute for Cognitive Therapy; NY, NY
  • Behavior Therapy Associates; Somerset, NJ
  • Bellevue Hospital Center; NY, NY
  • Bergen County Division fo Family Guidance – Forensic Unit; Hackensack, NJ
  • Beth Israel Medical Center; NY, NY
  • Bronx Children’s Psychiatric Center; Bronx, NY
  • Center for Cognitive Behavioral Psychotherapy; NY, NY
  • Children’s Comprehensive Psychiatric Emergency Program (CCPEP); NY, NY
  • City College CUNY; NY, NY
  • Columbia University Medical Center Neuropsychology Service; NY, NY
  • Columbia-Presbyterian’s Children’s Hospital; NY, NY
  • Community Mental Health Services, St. Marys Hospital; Hoboken, NJ
  • Henry Ittleson Center; Bronx, NY
  • Hoboken University Medical Center; Hoboken, NJ
  • Holliswood Hospital; Holliswood, NY
  • Jacobi Medical Center; Bronx, NY
  • Jamaica Hospital Medical Center; Jamaica, NY
  • Jewish Board of Family & Children’s Services (JBFCS); Douglaston, NY
  • Jewish Board of Family & Children’s Services (JBFCS); Riverdale, NY
  • JFK Medical Center-The Center for Behavioral Health; Edison, NJ
  • Karen Horney Clinic; NY, NY
  • Kings County Hospital Center; Brooklyn, NY
  • Mt. Sinai Adult Inpatient Unit; NY, NY
  • Mt. Sinai Child & Family Support Program; NY, NY
  • Mt. Sinai Eating and Weight Disorders Program; NY, NY
  • Mt. Sinai Medical Center Department of Neurology; NY, NY
  • Mt. Sinai Medical Center, Dept of Rehabilitation Medicine; NY, NY
  • Mt. Sinai Obsessive Compulsive Disorders Treatment Center; NY, NY
  • Nassau University Medical Center; East Meadow, NY
  • New York Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical College – Manhattan Division; NY, NY
  • North Central Bronx Hospital; Bronx, NY
  • South Beach Psychiatric Center; Staten Island, NY
  • St. Barnabas Hospital; Bronx, NY
  • St. Dominics Home; Bronx, NY
  • St. Luke’s – Roosevelt Hospitals; NY, NY
  • Staten Island University Hospital; Staten Island, NJ
  • The Addiction Institute of New York; NY, NY
  • The Center of Alcohol Studies at Rutgers; Piscataway, NJ
  • William Paterson University – Counseling Center; Wayne, NJ
  • Yale Young Adult Services; New Haven, CT
  • YCS Institute for Infant and Preschool Mental health; East Orange, NJ
  • Youth Development Clinic; Newark, NJ
  • Barnard College Furman Counseling; NY, NY
  • Behavioral Associates; NY, NY
  • Connecticut Children’s Medical Center School; Wethersfield, CT
  • Division of Family Guidance; Hackensack, NJ
  • Elmhurst Hospital Center – Mt. Sinai Services; Elmhurst, NY
  • Essex County Hospital Center; Cedar Grove, NJ
  • Fay J Linder Center for Autism; Long Island, NY
  • FDU Center for Psychological Services – Assessment emphasis; Hackensack, NJ
  • FDU Center for Psychological Services – Therapy emphasis; Hackensack, NJ
  • Four Winds Hospital; Katonah, NY
  • Hackensack Univ. Medical Center, Audrey Hepburn’s Children’s House; Hackensack, NJ
  • Hackensack University Medical Center; Hackensack, NJ
  • Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Center; Ward’s Island, NY
  • Leake and Watts Services, Inc.; Yonkers, NY
  • Lincoln Hospital; Bronx, NY
  • Long Island Jewish Medical Center, The Zucker Hillside Hospital; North Shore, Long Island NY
  • Manhattan Psychiatric Center; Randall’s Island, NY
  • Memorial Sloan Kettering; NY, NY
  • Metropolitan Correctional Center; NY, NY
  • Montclair State University Counseling Center; Montclair, NJ
  • Montefiore Medical Center of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine; Bronx, NY
  • Northeast Epilepsy group; NY, NY & Hackensack, NJ
  • NYSPI at Columbia Presbyterian; NY, NY
  • NYU Child Study Center; Hackensack, NJ
  • NYU Comprehensive Epilepsy Center; NY, NY
  • NYU Counseling Center; NY, NY
  • Phipps Community Development Corporation; Bronx, NY
  • Princeton House Behavioral Health; Princeton, NJ
  • Queens Hospital Center; Jamaica, Queens
  • Regional Diagnostic &Treatment Center at Children’s Hospital of NJ; Newark, NJ
  • Rehabilitation Specialists; Fair Lawn, NJ
  • Rockland Children’s Psychiatric Center; Orangeburg, NY
  • Seton Hall University – Counseling Services; South Orange, NJ
  • The Women’s Health Project Treatment and Research Center – St Luke’s Hosp.; NY, NY
  • Tomorrow’s Children Institute at Hackensack Hospital; Hackensack, NJ
  • Trinitas Hospital Child and Adolescent Outpatient Unit; Elizabeth, NJ
  • Uconn; Farmington, CT
  • UMDNJ-UBHC; Piscataway, NJ
  • Washington Heights Community Center at Columbia-Presbyterian/NYSPI; NY, NY
  • Weill Cornell Medical College/New York-Presbyterian Hospital, White Plains, NY
  • Westchester Jewish Community Services; Hartsdale, NY

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Clinical Psychology - Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)

The Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology is an Indiana University degree offered in the Department of Psychology.

The Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology prepares students for careers as researchers, educators, direct service providers, and administrators. Although the program provides strong clinical training, its primary emphasis is on the methods of behavioral science, and the program offers unusually rich opportunities for research and training.

The program requires a full-time commitment for six years of study, including completion of six academic semesters of course work, a minimum 800 hours of practicum experience, a master’s thesis, a preliminary examination to admit a student to doctoral candidacy, a dissertation, and a one-year internship. In addition to the core course work in clinical psychology, students take additional courses, gain focused research experience, and gain practicum experience across our three areas of emphasis: clinical health psychology, diversity science, and dual diagnosis (severe mental illness/psychiatric rehabilitation and substance use). The program has a strong commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion, as seen in our community, coursework, practicum placements, and research. The program is accredited by the American Psychological Association and is a member of the Council of Clinical Health Psychology Training Programs.

Program details » Learn about the program's goals and objectives, core faculty, training emphases, and more.

Requirements

Read the requirements in the academic bulletin. Choose the bulletin year corresponding to your first term.

  • 2023–2024
  • 2022–2023
  • 2021–2022
  • 2020–2021
  • 2019–2020
  • 2018–2019

Offered at IU Indianapolis by School of Science

Offered on campus

Career Services

See our PREPs page.

More information

Learn more about this degree program

Program details

The Clinical Psychology Ph.D. program subscribes to a clinical science model of clinical training. As such, students seeking strong research training, in conjunction with  evidence -based practicum experiences, would be the most desirable students for the program.

Program highlights

  • Unique programmatic focus areas: health psychology, diversity science, and dual diagnosis (severe mental illness and substance use)
  • High publishing productivity of students and faculty
  • Cutting edge, grant-funded research
  • Located on the primary academic health sciences campus for the state of Indiana, with active collaborators and clinical supervisors in the IU School of Medicine and nearby hospitals
  • Students receive prestigious recognitions and awards
  • Diverse range of community-based clinical practicum opportunities, tailored to your interests
  • 100% APA-accredited internship match rate in the past 10+ years (compared to 81% national average of Clinical Ph.D. programs)
  • Emphasize diversity, equity, and inclusion in our community and research
  • Nestled in the urban city of Indianapolis; low cost of living (12% below national average) allows enjoyment of great restaurants, parks, museums, and events on a graduate student budget
  • Welcoming culture of collaboration and collegiality among students and faculty

Goals & objectives

The Ph.D. Program in Clinical Psychology was designed to integrate the assessment and intervention strategies of evidence-based clinical psychology with health/rehabilitation psychology's emphasis on optimizing the adaptation of persons with chronic, disabling medical conditions. Our program addresses the psychological and social consequences of mental and physical health conditions. As researchers, we study behaviors, experiences, and attitudes of persons with disabilities and illness; develop and assess theoretical models that attempt to understand how behavior, health, and illness interact; and develop and evaluate treatment approaches. As practitioners, we assess individuals and their environments, plan and implement interventions, and monitor the success of this work. The program emphasizes the acquisition of the methods, theories, and knowledge of behavioral science along with the practitioner skills of clinical psychology.

The program embraces a series of three overarching goals and seven subsidiary objectives for training. The goals and objectives are outlined below. Upon graduating from the program, students will be able to demonstrate a high level of competence in each of these areas.

Goal 1: To produce graduates who are capable of making independent contributions to the scientific knowledge base of clinical psychology

  • Objective 1A: Students will demonstrate knowledge in the breadth of scientific psychology, including historical perspectives of its foundations and development.
  • Objective 1B: Students will demonstrate knowledge in the theory, methodology, and data analysis skills related to psychological research
  • Objective 1C: Students will demonstrate the ability to generate new scientific knowledge and theory related to the field of psychology.

Goal 2: To produce graduates who can competently integrate the science and practice of clinical psychology and can provide evidence-based services

  • Objective 2A: Students will acquire knowledge and skills in the assessment of individual strengths and weaknesses, as well as the diagnosis of psychological problems and disorders.
  • Objective 2B: Students will acquire knowledge and skills in the conceptualization, design, implementation, delivery, supervision, consultation, and evaluation of evidence-based psychosocial interventions for psychological problems and disorders.

Goal 3: To produce graduates who demonstrate they can conduct themselves in culturally sensitive and ethical ways in the science and practice of clinical psychology

  • Objective 3A: Students will demonstrate sensitivity, knowledge, and skills in regard to the role of human diversity in the research and practice of clinical psychology.
  • Objective 3B: Students will demonstrate a working knowledge of the APA ethical code and will demonstrate their ability to apply ethical principles in practical contexts.

Core faculty

Program leadership.

Melissa Cyders, Ph.D. Director of Clinical Training

As the Director of Clinical Training, I oversee the management of the clinical psychology program, including student recruitment, retention, and development. I am also responsible for day-to-day management of the program, communication with our accrediting body, and working with other program faculty and leadership to ensure students develop and meet competency milestones while enrolled in our program.

Kendra Stewart, Ph.D. Assistant Director of Clinical Training

As the Assistant Director of Clinical Training, I oversee the clinical training for the program, including practicum development, placement, and quality control. I also work with other faculty to ensure students clinical training meets program guidelines and goals.

Deanna Barthlow, Ph.D. Director of the Clinical Psychology Mental Health Center

As Director of the Clinical Psychology Mental Health Center , I oversee the day-to-day operations of the center, provide supervision and training to first-time and advanced clinical trainees, and make all administrative decisions for the center. I work with other faculty and leadership to ensure students are prepared for external advanced practicum placements.

Core Faculty Mentors

My primary research area is the role of emotional experiences and impulsivity in risk processes for a wide range of maladaptive health behaviors, including alcohol use, drug use, gambling, risky sexual practices, sexting, and eating disorders.

I am planning to recruit a new graduate student for my research laboratory for Fall 2025.

Adam Hirsh, Ph.D.

My lab conducts research on the biopsychosocial aspects of pain and functioning in humans. We study providers of pain care, patients who experience pain, and healthy laypersons.

India Johnson, Ph.D.

My body of work examines evidence-based interventions to promote the success of singly and multiply marginalized persons across a variety of organizational environments.

Kyle S. Minor, Ph.D.

My focuses on identifying clinical risk markers of psychosis and implementing interventions for individuals at risk for or diagnosed with Schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. The long-term goals of my research program are to develop instruments that accurately assess psychotic symptoms and create interventions to improve the lives of people with psychosis.

Catherine Mosher, Ph.D.

My primary research interests are: (1) developing, evaluating, and disseminating psychosocial interventions for cancer patients and their family caregivers; and (2) identifying demographic, medical, and social predictors of physical and psychological health outcomes in cancer patients and their family caregivers. My recent projects have focused on novel applications of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for these populations.

I am not planning to recruit a new graduate student for my research laboratory for Fall 2025.

Kevin Rand, Ph.D.

Currently, my research is focused in several health-relevant populations, including people with cancer, people experiencing clinical pain, and women experiencing pelvic health concerns (e.g., dysmenorrhea, pelvic organ prolapse, hot flashes). I am interested in understanding how people cope with their illnesses and how these coping efforts influence psychological adjustment (especially symptoms of depression and anxiety) and future treatment decisions. More generally, I investigate how people think about and pursue goals in their lives, how they cope with goal disruptions, and how these goal pursuits influence people's mental and physical health. I am a core faculty member of the RESPECT center, which is a collaborative, interdisciplinary group of researchers and clinicians who are interested in the science of palliative and end-of-life care across the lifespan.

Jesse Stewart, Ph.D.

I conduct research examining the influence of negative emotions (e.g., depression, anxiety, and hostility/anger) on the development of cardiovascular diseases, such as heart disease and hypertension. I also investigate the role of cardiovascular responses to stress in the development of cardiovascular diseases.

Wei Wu, Ph.D.

I am interested in developing, improving, and evaluating statistical methods that are useful in clinical research. My research has been primarily focused on the methods to analyze missing data such as multiple imputation methods for continuous and categorical data, and methods to analyze change such as growth curve modeling, as well as methods to probe possible causal effects such as cross lagged panel models. I am also interested in efficient designs for longitudinal research.

I am planning to recruit a new graduate student as a co-advisor with another faculty member in Fall 2025.

John C. Guare, Ph.D. , Assistant Director of Clinical Training

Emphasis: Health Psychology

As the Assistant Director of Clinical Training, I oversee the clinical training for the program, including practicum development, placement, and quality control. Although I do not maintain a program of research, my interests are in health psychology, diabetes, and obesity.

John H. McGrew, Ph.D., Emeritus

Emphasis: Severe Mental Illness

My current interests can be broadly classified into three areas: evidence-based community treatments for persons with severe mental illness, mental health system change and assessment, and autism.

Michelle P. Salyers, Ph.D.

My broad area of research interest is psychiatric rehabilitation, focusing on skills and supports to help adults with severe mental illnesses achieve recovery goals. I am currently working on projects related to two main areas: 1) shared-decision making to help people collaborate more effectively with their treatment providers; and 2) enhancing well-being of treatment providers to help reduce burnout and turnover, while also improving quality of care.

Tamika Zapolski, Ph.D.

My primary research focus is on understanding important factors related to risk of drug use among youth and developing interventions to help mitigate risk for future use among youth. Although many of the findings based on the research from my lab are universal, applicable across ethnic groups, I do pay particular focus on understanding cultural factors that are influential in elevating risk of drug use among African American youth.

Degree requirements

Students are required to complete a minimum of 90 semester hours of graduate work.

Clinical Psychology (18 credit hours)

Courses include two semesters each of intervention and assessment; coursework in ethical, cultural, and legal issues in clinical psychology; and psychopathology.

Statistics and Methods (15 credit hours)

Two courses in basic statistical techniques, one course in research methods, one course in systematic review and meta-analysis, and an additional advanced statistical analysis course.

Psychology Breadth (6 credit hours)

Two integrated breadth courses: one examining cognitive, affective, and social aspects of behavior and one in developmental neuroscience.

Clinical Practicum (12 credit hours)

A minimum of 800 hours of supervised training with hands-on experience in assessment and intervention. First clinical practicum experience occurs in our Mental Health Center, providing intensive training and supervision. Subsequent practica occur in local clinical and healthcare settings.

Minor (6 credit hours)

Two courses in minor area of study (Diversity Science or Psychology of Teaching).

Professional Development (5)

Courses include a first-year professional development seminar, a teaching seminar, area meetings, advanced clinical intervention trainings, and an advanced professional development seminar.

Electives (12 credit hours)

Four courses of the student’s choice from the psychology department or from other departments within the university, pending approval of the student’s plan of study committee.

Master's Thesis (3 credit hours)

Dissertation (9-18 credit hours), clinical internship (0-2 credit hours).

A minimum of 2000 hours of supervised training at an approved site.

General Psychology Core (12 credit hours)

One course in each of the four core areas (biological, cognitive-affective, social, and psychopathology).

Statistics and Methods (12 credit hours)

Two courses in basic statistical techniques and one course each in measurement theory and research design.

A minimum of 800 hours of supervised training in local clinical and healthcare settings with hands-on experience in assessment and intervention.

Electives (9 credit hours)

Three courses of the student’s choice from the psychology department or from other departments within the university, pending approval of the student’s plan of study committee.

Teaching Experience (1-2 credit hours)

A teaching seminar and supervised experience.

Admission requirements

Degrees are conferred through the Indiana University system. Entering students must meet the minimum admission requirements of the Graduate School of Indiana University and departmental requirements.

We are particularly interested in receiving applications from persons with a strong commitment to research, scholarly work, and a scientific perspective. Previous research experience or the completion of an undergraduate research project is seen as particularly positive (but not required). We value a broad liberal arts or science-based undergraduate education as the foundation for graduate study. We take a balanced approach to admission, and relative weaknesses in one area may be balanced by strengths in others. The clinical psychology program is committed to creating a diverse, equitable, and inclusive learning environment for its students; persons with disabilities and underrepresented individuals are encouraged to apply.

Admission to the program is competitive and only under unusual circumstances will students be considered for admission who fail to meet these standards:

Bachelor's degree

All applicants must have a bachelor's degree from an accredited institution. You do not need a master's degree to apply.

An undergraduate and graduate grade point average of 3.2 or higher on a 4-point scale. The mean GPA of students admitted between 2014-2020 is 3.81.

Submission of GRE test scores is optional - applications with and without GRE scores will be given equal consideration. Scores are used in the overall evaluation process by the area to determine preparation for graduate training, but there is no minimum score required and all credentials are considered by the admissions committee. Only valid GRE scores are accepted; test scores are valid for five years after the testing year in which you tested (July 1-June 30).

Psychology GRE

The Psychology GRE is optional, but not required - applications with and without GRE scores will be given equal consideration.

Undergraduate Prerequisites

Except in unusual circumstances, students admitted to the program are expected to have completed at least 15 credit hours in psychology. Although there are no specific undergraduate course prerequisites for program entry, students without coursework in the following areas will likely be at a disadvantage when taking some of the required courses: 1) research methods, 2) statistics, and 3) abnormal psychology. Students without preparation in these areas may be asked by their instructors to complete some remedial activity prior to enrolling in the graduate course (e.g., reading an undergraduate text or taking an undergraduate course).

Curriculum Vitae and Essay

Applicants are asked to submit a curriculum vitae, as well as a personal essay of </= 750 words using the following prompt: Describe how your background, accomplishments, and life experiences led to your decision to pursue a PhD in Clinical Psychology from our institution. Discuss your goals for graduate school and your future career. In addition, describe how your background, accomplishments, and life experiences will help you contribute to a diverse, equitable, and inclusive Department where everyone feels valued and is treated with dignity and respect. Include any educational, personal, cultural, economic, or social experiences, as well as any challenges and/or opportunities, that are relevant to your academic path.

International students English proficiency requirements

As an international applicant, you must take the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) unless you have a bachelor's degree from a predominantly English-speaking country . You must have a minimum total score of 80  on the internet-based test (subscore minimums must also be met: Reading-19, Listening-14, Writing-18, Speaking-18). For more information, visit the Office of International Affairs website.

Application deadline

December 1 st (Students admitted for fall enrollment only). To be considered for admission, all application materials must be received by the deadline.

Application review & selection process

Completed applications received by the application deadline are reviewed in December or early January by the Admissions Committee, consisting of the core faculty. After the folders are reviewed individually by a subset of the Committee, a meeting is scheduled in which an initial pool of candidates is selected. Candidate selections are made using the following criteria: research experience, GPA, strength of undergraduate education, GRE scores (optional), and letters of recommendation. The compatibility of student interests with those of the faculty and the program emphasis (i.e., health psychology, diversity science, severe mental illness, substance use research) is strongly considered.

Candidates are then interviewed by faculty and staff during a day-long zoom interview, usually scheduled in January or February. Candidates also meet individually and as a group with current graduate students. Alternative interviews may be conducted if the applicant is unable to attend the interview day.

Following the interviews, the Committee meets again to make final selections. The candidates are then rank-ordered with primary selections and alternates. Candidates who are recommended by the Admissions Committee are then contacted by email, with acceptance letters sent to the applicants. Following American Psychological Association Guidelines, applicants must communicate whether they accept the offer for admission by April 15. The rank-order list of accepted applicants provides the next individual who will be offered acceptance into the program if an initial offer is rejected. Finally, the selections are sent to the Graduate School at West Lafayette for final approval. Candidates offered admission may be offered an opportunity to attend admissions open house prior to making an enrollment decision.

Each year approximately 4-8 applicants are admitted by the Admissions Committee, with all the faculty committee members participating in the selection process. The exact number of admitted students is determined by a consideration of (1) qualifications of applicants; (2) capacity to provide quality training to all students; and (3) capacity to provide assistantships or other sources of support for all new and current students. Because more qualified applicants apply to the program than can be admitted, the first criterion has not been the limiting factor. The second criterion assumes a ratio of no more than 6 students to each core faculty. With 9 current core faculty who mentor research, the maximum capacity is approximately 56 students. As a practical matter, financial support is currently the most salient limiting factor. Taking into consideration fellowship, grant, and departmental support, we anticipate 4-8 students can be brought in annually.

Offers & acceptances policy

The Clinical Psychology Program follows the policy of the Council of University Directors of Clinical Training (CUDCP).

Student admissions, outcomes, and other data

View student admissions, outcomes, and other data for the Clinical Psychology Ph.D. program »

Training emphases

The program provides training emphases in three areas:

  • clinical health psychology
  • diversity science
  • dual diagnosis (severe mental illness/psychiatric rehabilitation and substance use)

This is accomplished by completing advanced courses, selecting targeted practicum experiences, and engaging in research in these areas. The Department of Psychology, the IUI campus, and the city of Indianapolis provide numerous research and clinical opportunities and a rich environment to pursue these interests. The Department of Psychology has ongoing funded projects in all three areas and provides for a vibrant climate of scholarly activity. Superb practicum placement opportunities are also readily available in all three areas and complement the vigorous research experiences and the advanced courses offered.

Clinical Health Psychology

Clinical health psychology is both an applied and a basic science, traditionally focusing on four areas: health promotion and maintenance, prevention and treatment, etiology and correlates of health, illness, and dysfunction, and the health care system and the formulation of health care policy. A clinical health psychologist is a clinical psychologist who specializes in the application of psychological knowledge to the understanding of health and illness through basic and clinical research, education, and clinical service activities. Related areas are behavioral medicine and health psychology. This training emphasis area will prepare students to enter the field as researchers, practitioners, and/or administrators in a variety of settings, including universities, medical schools, hospitals and medical centers, clinics, private practice, and government agencies.

Diversity Science

Diversity science examines issues related to diversity, equity, and inclusion, including stigma, differential access to resources, and poorer physical and mental health outcomes that disproportionately affect minoritized populations. This minor provides coursework that examines the historical influences, social structures, and contemporary practices that produce disparities across several sectors in society, as well as strategies and interventions to mitigate and prevent such disparities.

Dual Diagnosis

The co-occurrence of substance and alcohol use and severe mental illness is common and requires a focus on prevention, early identification, and specialized intervention. Individuals with severe psychiatric disorders (such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder) often have ongoing problems in community functioning and require a set of practices aimed at assisting such individuals to achieve personal life goals and full integration into the community. Similarly, substance and alcohol use disorders have mortality rates and societal costs and are often difficult to treat. Students interested in dual diagnosis are exposed to new research and clinical training related to evidence-based practice and have an opportunity to work with nationally recognized leaders in the field. Research practices span from neuroimaging, neurocognitive measurements, ecologically momentary assessment, laboratory-based oral and intravenous alcohol studies, qualitative methods, school-based interventions, and large-scale longitudinal survey methods. Students often participate in research collaborations and practicum training through the ACT Center of Indiana, the Roudebush VA, PARC center for early psychosis, the Indiana Alcohol Research Center, the Indiana School of Medicine Adolescent Division, the Addiction Neuroscience Program, the Indiana University Addictions Grand Challenge Program, and a T32 training grant housed in the Department of Psychology focused on training on research in alcohol use.

Mental Health Center

The Mental Health Center is an in-house training clinic for the IUI Clinical Psychology PhD program. Services are provided by doctoral students from the PhD program in Clinical Psychology at IUI. They will be supervised by a licensed clinical psychologist.

We serve IUI students (undergraduate, professional, and graduate) with clinically significant but less severe/urgent behavioral health and wellness-related needs with individual and group therapy.

We also aim to serve IUI students and community members who need educational and/or behavioral health assessments.

Mental Health Center website »

External clinical practica

The IUI campus and the city of Indianapolis provide a rich environment for clinical practica.

A clinical practicum is a supervised training and educational experience conducted in a university, hospital, or community health care setting. Generally, the sites for these practica are located in the Indianapolis area, but other locations are also possible. Training stresses the integration of scientific method, critical thinking, and evidence-based knowledge into professional practice. Practicum training helps students increase their basic clinical skills and confidence and acquire increased understanding of professional responsibility and ethics, as well as the many roles that psychologists can perform.

Practica are organized on a one or two semester-long basis and are usually one or two days each week. An important feature of the practicum experience at IUI is a high degree of access to many different clinical settings and client populations within and across specializations. In addition, most practicum sites involve professional psychologists who provide on-site supervision and serve as mentors. Health professionals including psychiatrists and others also function in supervisory and mentoring roles. The Assistant Director of Clinical Training meets individually with students to identify practicum sites based on student interest, skills, and site availability. Close liaison is maintained between the Assistant Director of Clinical Training and each practicum site to ensure that the practicum experience is meeting the training needs and educational objectives of the student. Most students complete 4-5 different placements.

Examples of potential practicum sites

  • Indiana University Medical Center – Outpatient Psychiatry Clinic
  • Roudebush VAMC Hospital – Mental Health Unit
  • Riley Hospital for Children – Tic and Anxiety Clinic
  • Carmel Psychology (children/adolescents)
  • Marian University Counseling Center
  • Indiana University (IU) Health – Primary Care
  • Indiana Polyclinic (chronic pain clinic)
  • Indiana University Medical Center – Diabetes Clinic
  • Riley Hospital for Children – Pediatric Pain Clinic
  • Riley Hospital for Children – Gender and Adolescent Health Program
  • Riley Hospital for Children – Pediatric Behavioral Sleep Medicine
  • Riley Hospital for Children – Pediatric Psycho-oncology
  • Roudebush VAMC Hospital – Pain Clinic
  • Roudebush VAMC Hospital – Primary Care Clinic
  • Roudebush VAMC Hospital – Palliative Care
  • Indiana University Medical Center – Digestive and Liver Disorders Division
  • Methodist Hospital – Addiction and Treatment Recovery Center
  • Methodist Hospital – Choice Program (Primary Care)
  • Charis Center for Eating Disorders
  • Indiana University Medical Center – Neuropsychology Clinic
  • Meridian Psychological Associates
  • Roudebush VAMC Hospital – Neuropsychology Clinic
  • Eskenazi Hospital – Sandra Eskenazi Center for Brain Excellence
  • Neuropsychology Associates
  • Beacon Psychology Services (children/adolescents)
  • Juvenile Detention Center (children/adolescents)
  • Eskenazi Hospital – Midtown Community Mental Health Center
  • Eskenazi Hospital Midtown Westside –Borderline Personality Disorder Clinic
  • Eskenazi Hospital – Midtown Prevention and Recovery Clinic (PARC)
  • Roudebush VAMC Hospital – Psychosocial Rehabilitation and Recovery Center (PRRC)
  • Roudebush VAMC Hospital – Psychiatric Inpatient Unit

Financial support

The Department of Psychology provides financial support for Ph.D. students throughout their graduate education. We make the commitment to support students in good standing for 5 years. Although the availability of student funding fluctuates, we have been able to provide financial support (stipend + tuition scholarship for the maximum remittable portion of tuition) for all of our doctoral students for five years. Students in good standing within the Clinical Psychology program will receive a minimum stipend of $21,000. Stipend support typically comes from teaching or research assistantships, for 20 hours/week, 10 months of the year (with additional summer funding often available).

Teaching assistantship activities may include grading, coaching students, teaching labs, and guest lecturing. Advanced students often have the opportunity to be the instructor of record for a number of different courses, including on-line options. Research assistantships typically involve working with the student's primary mentor (and/or collaborators) on funded research studies. Activities may include project management, recruiting and interviewing clinical participants, data analysis, manuscript writing, and grant writing.

The Clinical Program sets aside at least 25% of our annual budget to go directly to students to support travel and research projects. The past few years, we have been able to support over $12,000 worth of student requests annually. In addition, research grants and dissertation fellowships are available on a competitive basis, and our students have been successful in obtaining these. The departmental or school provides licenses for major research software, and student licenses for other software are available for low cost. The Clinical Program also purchases clinical manuals and library resources each year.

If you are from a qualifying Midwest state, you may be eligible for the Midwest Exchange Program .

Accreditation

The program is accredited by the American Psychological Association (APA).

Questions related to the program's accredited status should be directed to the Commission on Accreditation:

Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation American Psychological Association 750 First Street NE Washington, DC 20002

Phone: (202) 336-5979 Email: [email protected]

accreditation.apa.org accreditation.apa.org/contact

Post-baccalaureate training

Interested in our program but need to develop your skills and preparedness? Apply for the IUI Post-Baccalaureate Research Education Program (IPREP) .

Student accomplishments

Graduate students in our Clinical Psychology Ph.D. program are competitive in obtaining external grants, fellowships, and awards. Our students have been successful in receiving various campus-wide university fellowships, research/travel awards and other awards including the Sherry Queener Graduate Student Excellence Award and Elite 50. In addition, our students have obtained pre-doctoral internship placements at many excellent clinical and research facilities around the country.

Here are a few recent accomplishments of our current students.

External Research Grants & Fellowships

  • Danielle Abel,  CTSI TL1 Fellowship Award (2021), VA Connecticut Bell-Kerns Psychology Research Award (2024), VA VISN 1 New England MIRECC Pilot Study Grant (2024)
  • Tracy Anastas,  F31 Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award, National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD)
  • Eva Argyriou,  F31 Predoctoral Training Award
  • Lindsey Fisher-Fox, NSF Graduate Research Fellowship (2022)
  • Alexis Grant, APA Division 40 Dissertation Grant (2022), APA Division 38 Dissertation Grant (2022), VA Connecticut Bell-Kerns Psychology Research Award (2024)
  • Shirin Khazvand, NIAAA T32 Training Grant (2022)
  • Ellen Krueger,  T32 Predoctoral Training Award, Interdisciplinary Training in Behavioral Oncology, NCI
  • Melissa Liu, NIAAA T32 Training Grant (2022)
  • Madisen Russell, NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program Honorable Mention (2024)
  • Matt Schuiling, Sleep Research Society Trainee Merit Award (2022)
  • Danielle Able, CTSI TL1 Fellowship Award (2021)
  • Tracy Anastas,   F31 Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award , National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD)
  • Eva Argyriou, F31 Predoctoral Training Award
  • Devin Banks,  F31 Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award , National Institute on Drug Abuse
  • Ellen Krueger,  T32 Predoctoral Training Award , Interdisciplinary Training in Behavioral Oncology, NCI
  • Loretta Hsueh,  Predoctoral Fellowship , Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI), National Institutes of Health (NIH)/National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS)
  • Matthew Marggraf, Predoctoral Fellowship , Indiana CTSI, NIH/NCATS
  • Danielle Tometich, F31 Ruth Kirschstein National Research Service Award , National Cancer Institute (NCI);   T32 Predoctoral Fellowship , Interdisciplinary Training in Behavioral Oncology, NCI;  R25 Predoctoral Fellowship , Training in Research for Behavioral Oncology and Cancer Control Program, NCI
  • Miji Um, F31 Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award , National Institute on Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse (NIAAA);  T32 Predoctoral Fellowship , Training grant on genetic aspects of alcoholism, NIAAA

National Awards

  • Tracy Anastas,  Junior Investigator Research Award, Pain & Disparities Special Interest Group, American Pain Society
  • Chachi Bocanegra, US Association for the Study of Pain Travel Award
  • Ian Carson, Society for Prevention Research Early Career Prevention Network Travel Award (2023)
  • Chris Crawford, American Psychosomatic Society Scholar Travel Award (2023), Indy Pride Scholarship (2023)
  • Emma Estrella, US Association for the Study of Pain Travel Award
  • Alexis Grant,  Interfaith Leadership Grant (2021), International Association for the Study of Pain Best Paper published in the past 5 years (2022)
  • Timothy Lipuma, Honorable Mention (2022), Ford Fellowship
  • Melissa Liu, Student Merit Award (2021, 2022), Research Society on Alcoholism
  • Christiana Prestigiacomo,  Student Merit Award (2021), Research Society on Alcoholism
  • Maggie Rose-McCandlish, National Center for Complementary and Inegrative Health Merit Award for Intramural Scientific Achievement (2023)
  • Matt Schuiling, American Psychosomatic Society Scholar Travel Award (2023), Sleep Research Society Trainee Merit Award (2023)
  • Michelle Williams,  Honorable Mention (2021), Ford Fellowship, American Psychosomatic Society Diversity Scholar Travel Award (2023)
  • Tracy Anastas, Junior Investigator Research Award,  Pain & Disparities Special Interest Group, American Pain Society
  • Kelli Chinh, Meritorious Student Abstract Award and Citation Abstract (2021), Society of Behavioral Medicine
  • Alexis Grant, Interfaith Leadership Grant (2021) , Interfaith Youth Core
  • Loretta Hsueh, Meritorious Student Abstract , Society of Behavioral Medicine
  • Lauren Mehok, Meritorious Student Abstract Award and Best Trainee Abstract Winner (2021), Society of Behavioral Medicine
  • Jay Patel, Citation Poster (2021), American Psychosomatic Society
  • Brittany Polanka, Minority Initiative Award , American Psychosomatic Society
  • Christiana Prestigiacomo, Student Merit Award (2021), Research Society on Alcoholism
  • Alia Rowe, Student Poster Contest Finalist , Early Career Preventionist Network
  • Ekin Secinti, Distinguished Student Award (2021), Society of Behavioral Medicine
  • Danielle Tometich, 1 st  Place Award for Student Research , Pain Special Interest Group, Society of Behavioral Medicine
  • Michelle Williams, Honorable Mention (2021), Ford Fellowship
  • Miji Um, Honorable Mention , National Science Foundation - Graduate Research Fellowship Program, University Distinguished Master's Thesis Award , IUPUI, Distinguished Master's Thesis Award,  Midwest Association of Graduate Schools

School Awards

  • Danielle Abel, IUI Elite 50 (2023), Distinguished Master’s Thesis Award (2023)
  • Ian Carson, IUI Elite 50 (2024), IUI Athletics Favorite Professor (2023)
  • Richelle Clifton,  IUPUI Elite 50 (2021), IUPUI Premier 10 (2021)
  • Chris Crawford, John H. Edwards Fellowship (2024), Fielding Advocacy and Leadership Award (2024), GSDC Graduate Diversity Award (2024)
  • Lindsey Fisher-Fox, Chancellor’s Master of Science Award (2024)
  • Alexis Grant,  IUPUI Elite 50 (2021), Prevention Insight Big Idea Challenge (2021), GSDC Graduate Student Diversity Award (2023)
  • Jessica Mickens,  Racial Justice Research Award (2021), President’s Diversity Mahogany Monette, President’s Graduate Diversity Fellowship (2024)
  • Evan Myers, IUI Elite 50 (2024)
  • Christiana Prestigiacomo, IUI Elite 50 (2024)
  • Sarah Rogers,  IUPUI Elite 50 (2021)
  • Eddie Salgado, IUI Elite 50 (2024)
  • Michelle Williams, President’s Diversity Dissertation Fellowship (2023), Dissertation Fellowship (2024)
  • Tracy Anastas, IUPUI Elite 50 (2020)
  • Richelle Clifton, IUPUI Elite 50 (2021), IUPUI Premier 10 (2021)
  • Alexis Grant, IUPUI Elite 50 (2021), Prevention Insight Big Idea Challenge (2021)
  • Annalee Johnson-Kwochka, IUPUI Elite 50 (2020)
  • Lauren Mehok, IUPUI Elite 50 (2020)
  • Jessica Mickens, Racial Justice Research Award (2021)
  • Sarah Rogers, IUPUI Elite 50 (2021)
  • Ekin Secinti, IUPUI Elite 50 (2020), IUPUI Premier 10 (2020), Women’s History Month Leadership Award (2021)

Internship Match (past 5 years, 2019-2024)

  • Danielle Abel, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, CT
  • Tracy Anastas, VA Puget Sound, Seattle, WA
  • Eva Argyriou, Charleston Consortium, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC
  • Devin Banks, Charleston Consortium, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC
  • Emily Bass, Durham VA Medical Center, Durham, NC
  • Shaun Davis, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN
  • Kelly Chinh, UC San Diego, San Diego, CA
  • Richelle Clifton, University of Washington-Psychiatry, Seattle, WA
  • Ian Fischer, VA Maryland HCS/University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
  • Melanie Fischer, VA Maryland HCS/University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
  • Alexis Grant, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, CT
  • Loretta Hsueh, Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL
  • Annalee Johnson-Kwochka, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN
  • Shirin Khazvand, Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital, Saint Petersburg, FL
  • Ellen Krueger, Missouri Health Sciences Psychology Consortium, Columbia, MO
  • Melissa Liu, Minneapolis VA Health Care System, Minneapolis, MN
  • Matt Marggraf, VA Maryland Health Care System/University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
  • Lauren Mehok, Southwest Consortium, Albuquerque, NM
  • AJ Muth, Portland VA Medical Center, Portland, OR
  • Evan Myers, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, CT
  • Brittany Polanka, University of Florida Health Science Center, Gainesville, FL
  • Jay Patel, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL
  • Christiana Prestigiacomo, VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, MI
  • Phil Procento, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN
  • Sarah Rogers, Richard L. Roudebush Indianapolis VAMC, Indianapolis, IN
  • Alia Rowe, Atlanta VA Health Care System, Decatur, GA
  • Eddie Salgado, University of Michigan/Rackham Institute, Ann Arbor, MI
  • Ekin Secinti, Charleston Consortium, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC
  • Mackenzie Shanahan, University of Florida Health Science Center, Gainesville, FL
  • Aubrey Shell, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN
  • Danielle Tometich, Department of Psychiatry, Yale University, New Haven, CT
  • Miji Um, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
  • Michelle Williams, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, IL
  • Yue Yu, Charleston Consortium, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC
  • Danielle Abel, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, CT
  • Tracy Anastas, VA Puget Sound, Seattle, WA
  • Eva Argyriou, Charleston Consortium, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC
  • Devin Banks,  Charleston Consortium, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC
  • Shaun Davis, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN
  • Kelly Chinh, UC San Diego, San Diego, CA
  • Richelle Clifton, University of Washington-Psychiatry, Seattle, WA
  • Ian Fischer, VA Maryland HCS/University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
  • Melanie Fischer, VA Maryland HCS/University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
  • Alexis Grant, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, CT
  • Loretta Hsueh,  Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL
  • Annalee Johnson-Kwochka, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN
  • Shirin Khazvand, Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital, Saint Petersburg, FL
  • Ellen Krueger, Missouri Health Sciences Psychology Consortium, Columbia, MO
  • Matt Marggraf,  VA Maryland Health Care System/University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD
  • Lauren Mehok, Southwest Consortium, Albuquerque, NM
  • AJ Muth, Portland VA Medical Center, Portland, OR
  • Brittany Polanka,  University of Florida Health Science Center, Gainesville, FL
  • Jay Patel, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL
  • Phil Procento, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN
  • Sarah Rogers, Richard L. Roudebush Indianapolis VAMC, Indianapolis, IN
  • Alia Rowe, Atlanta VA Health Care System, Decatur, GA
  • Ekin Secinti, Charleston Consortium, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC
  • Mackenzie Shanahan, University of Florida Health Science Center, Gainesville, FL
  • Aubrey Shell, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN
  • Danielle Tometich,  Department of Psychiatry, Yale University, New Haven, CT
  • Miji Um, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
  • Yue Yu,  Charleston Consortium, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

The IUI Clinical Psychology Program is committed to promoting a diverse faculty and student body. Diversity enriches the graduate education experience, and we strive to create and maintain a welcoming environment for students, staff and faculty, including those from minority and underrepresented groups.

Diversity is a campus-wide value as well. IUI ranks in the top 20 non-Historically Black Colleges and Universities in the US for minority students. The School of Science in particular embodies a clear commitment to inclusion and diversity .

Our commitment to diversity is also clear in our training approach. We offer a specific course on diversity and integrate issues of cultural relevance and adaptation throughout our other coursework (e.g., intervention, assessment, research methods). Students complete a 6-credit hour in Diversity Science, preparing them to infuse diversity into their research programs and questions. Students receive clinical training working with diverse client populations given the rich variety of community practicum training sites. Research labs often include a focus on minority health, diversity science, and health disparities. For example, Dr. Adam Hirsh conducts research examining the mechanisms that give rise to disparities in pain care for African American and low socioeconomic patients. Dr. Jesse Stewart is interested in studying how race and ethnicity moderate the relationships between psychosocial factors and health-related outcomes, including cardiovascular disease, obesity, and diabetes. 

We are actively engaged in mentoring graduate students from underrepresented groups and to foster successful careers in academia and beyond. For example, some of our doctoral students are Southern Regional Education Board (SREB) Scholars. The SREB Doctoral Scholars Program is designed to address the shortage of minority faculty members at institutions of higher education by providing mentorship, networking, and training in conducting research, securing faculty positions, and progressing in academia.

Our faculty members are also actively engaged in mentoring undergraduate students from underrepresented groups in conducting research and pursuing graduate education. For example, we currently have undergraduate students participating in the Diversity Scholars Research Program and the Olaniyan Scholars Program. The campus is also a host to a postbaccalaureate program (IPREP) to prepare under-represented post-baccalaureate students for careers in academia; several of our faculty mentor students in this program. These students actively participate in our labs and enrich the research training and experience of our graduate students.

The Clinical Psychology Ph.D. program is accredited by the American Psychological Association (APA). The Commission on Accreditation at the APA requires that accredited programs provide this data.

Student admissions, outcomes, and other data »

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Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology

phd psychology clinical

Mission and Aims

The UNCG Clinical Psychology program produces clinical psychologists who are professionally and culturally competent in the science and practice of psychology, and who recognize their responsibility as Health Service Providers to actively contribute, through research and practice, to issues facing their communities. Our faculty and training program promote the development of critical thinking, innovation, discovery, community engagement, and adherence to evidence-based clinical practice among our trainees. We are also guided by our core values of collaboration, mutual respect, and equity, and by our commitment to diversity and inclusion, alongside high ethical standards. 

To achieve this mission, two related aims guide our approach to training our students. We seek to: 

  • Produce Health Service Psychologists with demonstrated knowledge and competence in psychology research, the practice of clinical psychology, and their integration  
  • Prepare socially responsible clinical psychologists who will contribute to the field and their community while demonstrating ethical behavior and respect for individual and cultural differences in all aspects of their professional behavior

Read more about the curriculum and practicum training

Application Deadline:

A NOTE ON THE GRE

The Clinical Program does not require GRE scores as part of the admissions process. GRE scores will not be considered as part of our admissions decisions rubric.

Note to 2025 applicants

Please stay tuned for application deadlines and interview dates. If you are interested in attending a Virtual Open House for prospective graduate students, please see this link .

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OUR COMMITMENT

Diversity and inclusion

“The clinical program is committed to promoting diversity and inclusiveness in research, service and practice…”

  • Read our full statement about Diversity and Inclusion

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RESEARCH & MENTORSHIP

Running Start

To give incoming students a jump start on their research, we developed a summer research experience called “Running Start.” Each incoming student is paired with a peer research mentor who meets with the student to introduce him/her to lab data collection procedures and lab data. The peer mentor and the student, in concert with the faculty advisor, discuss ideas for a first research project. The student then works to conduct a literature review, refines the question and “meets” electronically with the mentors to further develop their idea.

PHD PATHWAY

Next Gen Clin

In addition to addressing financial need, the program also addresses critical workforce development needs by expanding the pool of candidates who are able to afford and thrive in graduate school. Our  Next Gen Clin  program offers in-depth training in working with underserved populations through a combination of didactic and  experiential programming, close relationships with a UNCG Faculty Mentor and links students with alumni mentors currently working with underserved populations and within integrated-care settings.

  • More on Next Gen Clin

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Faculty in Clinical Psychology

Ilana s. berman.

A.P. Assistant Professor & Director of UNCG Psychology Clinic

UNCG Psychology Clinic

Not accepting students

Kari M. Eddington

Professor and Director of Clinical Training

Depression Treatment and Research Program

Adult depression, the role of motivation and self-regulation in emotional functioning, and psychotherapy process and outcome

Margaret Fields-Olivieri

Assistant Professor

Parent-toddler emotional and verbal communication processes, especially in the context of socioeconomic or psychosocial risk; Role of these processes in early emotional and language development; Child effects on parenting

Michaeline Jensen

Associate Professor

Interactions and Relationships Lab

Adolescent mental health and risk taking; parent-adolescent interactions; technology-mediated communication; acculturation and enculturation; intensive longitudinal methods.  

Accepting students

Susan P. Keane

RIGHT TRACK

Childhood psychopathology and children’s social relationships; parent-child interaction; the etiology, assessment, and treatment of peer rejection and neglect.

Julia Mendez

Parenting and School Readiness Lab

Developmental impact of poverty, parent involvement in children’s education, risk and resilience, and clinical interventions for ethnic minorities

Rosemery O. Nelson-Gray

Personality or temperament basis of adult psychopathology, with an emphasis on personality disorders, especially borderline personality disorder

Suzanne Vrshek-Schallhorn

Associate Professor and Undergraduate Program Director

Genetic, neuroendocrine, and cognitive mechanisms of life stress on depression

Danielle Weber

UNCG Couples Lab

Blair Wisco

Cognitive biases and emotion regulation processes in emotional disorders, particularly depression and PTSD

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the philosophy of the clinical training program.

The Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology is based on the scientist-practitioner model. Consistent with this model, our overarching goal is to foster the development of students as psychologists first, and secondarily as clinical psychologists. 

Is the clinical program accredited by the American Psychological ASSOCIATION?

The clinical program is accredited by the American Psychological Association.  This next site visit is scheduled for 2033. Questions related to the program’s accredited status should be directed to the Commission on Accreditation:

Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation American Psychological Association 750 1st Street, NE, Washington, DC 20002 Phone: (202) 336-5979 / E-mail:  [email protected] Web:  www.apa.org/ed/accreditation

What is the curriculum of the clinical program?

The Ph.D. curriculum for clinical students consists of clinical courses and seminars, courses and seminars in other areas of psychology, courses in statistics and research methods, practicum and internship training, and 24 credit hours of research including the thesis and dissertation. The program is structured so that it can be completed in five years, depending on the progress of the individual student, plus a required year of pre-doctoral internship. For more detailed information about the clinical program curriculum (including coursework, research requirements, and practicum training), see the Clinical Graduate Student Handbook under the Forms and Resources section. 

What practicum opportunities do you offer?

Clinical practicum and internship is required of all clinical students. In the first and second years, students enroll in assessment and intervention courses that include a methodological component. In the second year, students carry a small caseload. By the end of the third year, students typically will have completed 200 client contact hours in the UNCG Psychology Clinic where they are supervised by clinical faculty, all of whom are licensed psychologists. In the 4th and 5th years, students complete their advanced practicum training of 350 supervised client contact hours.  Advanced Practicum primarily occurs in the UNCG Psychology Clinic. Advanced Practicum training can also be obtained at program-approved placements. Some of these external sites require students to be licensed at MA level (LPA). All students are expected to obtain LPA licensure, including taking the EPPP exam; the Clinic provides financial support for licensure costs. The clinical program also sponsors DREAM Camp, a summer day camp for children with Autism Spectrum Disorder.

How is research training conducted in the clinical program?

Research training in UNCG’s clinical program is based on a mentorship model. Training begins in the summer prior to the first year with the Running Start program. During the first year, students begin to develop a thesis research project through the research methods course and under the direction of their faculty mentors. All second-year students make a presentation at the Graduate Research Conference, scheduled early in the fall term. The thesis is typically completed during the second or third year. An independent doctoral research project, which is often pilot work for the dissertation, is generally completed during the third or fourth years, and the doctoral dissertation during the fourth or fifth years.Students are encouraged to co-author papers for publication and presentation at professional meetings, as well as to have involvement in grant preparation. 

What is the student selection process?

Applications for admission to the Clinical program are due December 1st and are reviewed for admission into the program for the following Fall semester. Only one annual admission cycle is offered. Typically, around 200 applications are received for each admission cycle. We admit between 5-8 students each year.  Successful candidates show evidence of knowledge of psychology through their previous coursework and work/research experience, show evidence of success in managing the demands of academic coursework through a strong GPA and history of good grades, have scholarly interests that are a good “fit” with one or more of our core clinical faculty members, and are committed to diversity and inclusion in their endeavors as psychologists, consistent with the APA Code of Ethics for Psychologists. Successful applicants are notified by April 1 of each year. The selection process is usually completed by April 15 of each year. 

We do not admit part-time students.  Except in extraordinary circumstances, we do not offer clinical retraining of persons with a Ph.D. in another area of psychology. Qualified persons may take specific graduate courses in the department (e.g., Psychological Disorders of Adults or of Children) without admission to the program. Interested students should contact the Graduate School for admission as a non-degree student. The assessment, intervention, and practicum courses are open only to clinical psychology graduate students.

What financial support will I receive as a student?

Program costs are listed here: Student Outcome Table

Tuition waivers

The Department has a limited pool of funds that cover the costs out-of-state or in-state tuition.  We make every effort to provide Out of State (OS) students the funds to cover the cost of out-of-state tuition. In-state (IS) tuition funds are also available to students. Over the past 10 years, we have provided funds to cover the cost of  tuition to all IS and OS students who are in good standing in the program.

Tuition funds do not cover any student fees that may be charged by the University. Current student fee costs are found here .

Student Funding

Competitive Fellowships .  There are many fellowships at UNCG and in the department available for students. For example,  Alumni / Excellence / Hayes Fellowship s, t he PRIME program, the   Duffy scholarship.  Faculty nominate students for these fellowships. 

State Funded assistantships : State funding provided by the department typically provides students who are in good standing in the program with stipend support for a TA assignment (the commitment includes no more than 20 hours a week). 

Other Funding Opportunities : Clinical students may also be eligible for funding through our partnerships with external clinics, hospitals, schools, and other organizations. Some of these funding opportunities require that students be licensed at the Psychological Associate (Master’s) level.

What are the job placements of your alumni? 

Our alumni are employed in a variety of positions. Over the past 10 years, approximately 37% of our alumni work in hospitals, academic medical centers or VA Centers, 32% are employed in community mental health centers or are in independent private practice, 7% are employed in Academic Teaching positions, 7% are employed in research positions (including on who is doing pharmaceutical research) and 4% are in other Integrated Health care settings (including 1 in a pediatric practice).  Thirteen percent (13%) are completing post doctoral fellowship positions.

Once I earn my Ph.D., are there any other requirements for practicing as a clinical psychologist? 

Licensure as a psychologist is required in the United States. Our program requires students to obtain licensure in North Carolina at the master’s level (as a Licensed Psychological Associate). However, additional requirements must be met to obtain licensure at the doctoral level. See here for more information.

Request more information

Please address all Graduate Application questions to:

phd psychology clinical

Malcolm Moon

Administrative Assistant

[email protected] 336-334-5014

Please address all Clinical Training questions to:

phd psychology clinical

[email protected] 336-256-0045 Eberhart 279

Please address all additional Graduate questions to:

Ethan Zell

Professor and Graduate Program Director

[email protected] Eberhart 271

The U.S. Department of Education requires that all higher education institutions advise students as to whether their curriculum provides them with the eligibility to apply for a professional license and/or certification in the state for which they plan to practice. 

As such, please review  UNC Greensboro’s status by state for the Clinical Psychology program . You should note whether the program either “meets”, “does not meet”, or if there “has not been a determination” of the program’s status in the state for which you plan to practice. You should contact the program at  [email protected]  with any questions regarding this data.

Program Description

The doctoral program in clinical psychology at Teachers College is a mentor-matched program that prepares students to become knowledgeable researchers and effective practitioners. Our graduates tend to seek positions in academia, research institutes, hospitals, and community agencies. Many perform multiple professional roles upon graduating, including working in hospitals, teaching or consulting part-time, continuing their research and writing, and/or beginning a private practice. Completing a 95-point doctoral degree, including a full-year internship, typically takes five to seven years (M = 6.1 years over the past seven years). The Master of Science (M.S.) and Master of Philosophy (M.Phil.) degrees are earned en passant.

Our current training model is that of scientist-practitioner. Our adoption of this model means that we are dedicated to training students to generate new empirically-based knowledge in clinical psychology and to perform clinical work that is constantly informed by traditional and emerging scholarship in the field. We fully expect our students to learn to expertly produce, analyze, and discuss scientific material. We also expect our students to become proficient at providing clinical services to a diverse population. Furthermore, we expect our students to learn to integrate these tasks. Finally, we are committed to the belief that training as a clinical psychologist must be rooted in psychology itself, its body of knowledge, methods, and ethical principles that form the basis and context of clinical research and practice.

Thus, the driving goal of the Clinical Psychology Program is to provide rigorous training in both contemporary clinical science and clinical assessment and intervention. The research programs of our faculty span a wide range, including studies of risk and resilience; adjustment across diverse sociodemographic contexts; religious and spiritual development; altruism and caregiving; emotion and coping with trauma; suicidality; and psychotherapy process and outcome (see individual faculty web pages). Practicum work is done in our on-site clinic, the for Educational and Psychological Services.

Our clinical training has an ongoing psychodynamic tradition with increasing opportunities for supervision and didactic work in Cognitive-Behavioral, Interpersonal, Family Therapy, and other modalities. This training emphasizes assessment and intervention across the life span within the context of schools, families, and communities. We are committed to an enhanced focus on ethnic, cultural, and theoretical diversity not only in our curriculum and clinical training but also among our students, faculty, and clinical supervisors. Numerous practica and externship opportunities area available throughout the area and our students typically secure placement at one of their preferred internship sites.

The Program shares an in-house clinic ( The Dean Hope Center for Educational and Psychological Services ) with several other College programs. All clinical psychology doctoral students are staff members in the Center after their first semester in the Program, and carry a regular caseload of clients. The Center sponsors a weekly case conference, at which students present and discuss cases. Clinical work is supervised by core faculty members or by adjunct faculty who are psychologists in private practice in New York. Students usually carry four clients as part of their psychotherapy practicum and receive two hours of individual supervision each week with two different supervisors.

It should be noted, however, that those students whose career goal is full-time private practice will find our program - with its significant focus on research training - inappropriate for their needs. In fact, most successful applicants to our program have had research experience that matches the interests and expertise of one of our core faculty members.

Teachers College, Columbia University 328 Horace Mann

Contact Person: Rebecca Shulevitz

Phone: (212) 678-3267 Fax: (212) 678-8235

Email: shulevitz@tc.columbia.edu

Photo of teacher and student

PhD in Clinical Psychology

Program overview.

The mission of the PhD Program in Clinical Psychology at Montclair State University is to prepare students to become competent and highly skilled in the research and practice of clinical psychology, including the championing of equity, diversity, and inclusion. In emphasizing the integration of science and practice, the program adheres to a training approach consistent with the scientist-practitioner model, and strives for an accessible, equitable, and inclusive synthesis that is promotive of human rights, fairness, and dignity for all people. Students can seek advanced training in clinical child psychology or forensic psychology. Please see the Training Philosophy page for additional information about the program’s model of training.

To learn more about the program, please visit pages providing information about Admissions Requirements , Degree Requirements , Program Faculty, Current Students , Alumni , Student Leaders , Student Successes , and Field Placements .

APA Accreditation

The PhD Program in Clinical Psychology is fully accredited by the American Psychological Association (APA)’s Commission on Accreditation (CoA). The program’s full accreditation was effective as of the final day of the site visit (October 20, 2023) that preceded the CoA’s decision at its April 3–6, 2024, meeting, during which the CoA voted to approve us for full accreditation. Our next site visit will be scheduled for 2033 (10 years from the date of the April 2024 CoA meeting).

By way of history, our program launched in the fall of 2017, and was first accredited, on contingency, with an initial date of accreditation of April 5, 2020, and originally effective through April 5, 2025. Accordingly, all our students who have graduated to date completed an APA accredited program .

Questions related to the program’s accreditation status should be directed to the Commission on Accreditation:

Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation American Psychological Association 750 1st Street, NE, Washington, DC 20002 Phone: 202-336-5979 / E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.apa.org/ed/accreditation

Student Admissions, Outcomes, and Other Data

Download here .

Detailed information about the PhD Program in Clinical Psychology can be found in the Program Handbook .

If you have any questions about the program, please email the Director of Clinical Training (DCT), Dr. Christopher King , or the Psychology Department’s Coordinator for Graduate Student Advancement, Ms. Jen Wilenta , at [email protected] .

Many of the program’s activities take place in two buildings. The first is Dickson Hall , the home of the Psychology Department and research labs for many of the faculty who train students in the program. The second is the Montclair State University Center for Clinical Services (CCS), which opened in January 2016 and serves as a clinical training facility and resource for our students, being the home of the department’s clinic. CCS features classrooms, research labs, and 24 assessment/treatment rooms with state-of-the-art technology that allow faculty and students to directly observe real and simulated sessions in real time and record them for feedback and supervision.

The PhD Program in Clinical Psychology makes every effort to fund students through their first four years of study, unless otherwise agreed to at the time of admission. Support is provided through mechanisms such as doctoral (or similar graduate) assistantships, student instructor contracts, and clinical or research contracts. Please see the Financial Support section for additional information about funding opportunities for students.

PhD Program

phd psychology clinical

The PhD is conferred upon candidates who have demonstrated substantial scholarship and the ability to conduct independent research and analysis in Psychology.

A student typically concentrates in one of several areas within Psychology. Across all areas, the training program emphasizes the development of research competence, and students are encouraged to develop skills and attitudes that are appropriate to a career of continuing research productivity.

Two kinds of experience are necessary for this purpose. One is the learning of substantial amounts of theoretical, empirical, computational and methods information . A number of courses and seminars are provided to assist in this learning, and students are expected to construct a program in consultation with their advisor(s) to obtain this knowledge in the most stimulating and economical fashion.

A second aspect of training is one that cannot be gained from the courses or seminars. This is first-hand knowledge of, and practical experience with, the methods of psychological investigation and study . Therefore, students are expected to spend half of their time on research and to take no more than 10 units of course work per quarter, beginning in the first quarter.

Students achieve competence in unique ways and at different rates. Students and advisors work together to plan a program to accomplish these objectives.

If current students have any questions about the PhD program, please email the Student Services Manager, Dena Zlatunich, at  denamz [at] stanford.edu (denamz[at]stanford[dot]edu) . The current Director of Graduate Studies is Professor Hyo Gwoen.

If you are interested in applying for our PhD program, please carefully review the information on the  PhD Admissions website . Follow-up questions can be directed to the admissions staff at  psych-admissions [at] stanford.edu (psych-admissions[at]stanford[dot]edu) .

University of Delaware

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Clinical Science Concentration

  • PSYC100 Research Requirement
  • Neuroscience 4+1 (B.S./M.S.)
  • Behavioral Neuroscience Requirements
  • Clinical Science Requirements
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Welcome to Clinical Science

A college student sitting in front of a computer reviews notes during a Zoom meeting, while her colleague observes behind her.

The clinical science program in the Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences at the University of Delaware was established in 1968, has been continuously accredited by the American Psychological Association since 1975, and was accredited by the Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System in 2011.

Our overall goal is to train clinical researchers who produce, apply, and disseminate scientific knowledge. We train clinical scientists who keep abreast of current theory and research and contribute to the knowledge base in clinical psychology.

Nature and goals of the program

We believe that research is an essential career commitment for those who seek and obtain the Ph.D., and students accepted into our program are expected to share that commitment. Students also learn evidence-based assessment and interventions for adults and children with psychological disorders, but students whose primary career goal is the direct practice of psychology would be more satisfied in a different training program.

The aim of the clinical science program is to provide a structured set of research and clinical experiences that will prepare students for a career in clinical science. Therefore, graduates of our program will be competent in designing, conducting, and evaluating psychological research, as well as in delivering empirically-supported psychological services.

Consistent with this orientation, our program is a member of the Academy of Psychological Clinical Science - a prestigious group of 68 university-based clinical training programs and 12 internship sites that share similar goals for their programs and for the training of future clinical psychologists.

An integrative approach to training

The program integrates science and practice, which is reflected in collaborative, translational research. Our faculty and students apply basic psychological theories and empirical findings to real-world clinical problems such as depression, anxiety, child maltreatment and trauma, aggression, and couples’ distress in cancer patients.

Our program’s training model is consistent with the vision of the  Delaware Project . Specifically, we train students to emphasize continuity across a spectrum of research activities concerned with (a) basic mechanisms of psychopathology and behavior change, (b) intervention generation and refinement, (c) intervention efficacy and effectiveness, and (d) implementation and dissemination. 

Research with faculty mentors

Faculty members maintain visible and well-funded research programs. Much of this work is interdisciplinary, including collaborative projects with scholars in medical schools, universities, educational systems, and community agencies in the surrounding area. Members of the clinical faculty have been active in national, state, and local organizations concerned with advancing psychological knowledge; have played leadership roles in national organizations (e.g., the  Academy for Clinical Psychological Science ,  the Delaware Project ); and serve on many journal editorial boards, grant review study sections at the National Institute of Mental Health, and national task forces.

Funding is robust and drawn from multiple sources, including a Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institutes of Health, plus individual investigator grants from the National Institute of Mental Health, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse & Alcoholism, National Institute of Child Health & Human Development, among numerous other federal and private sources.

Mentor-based training

Students work closely with faculty advisors who mentor them throughout their graduate career. Students often work with more than one faculty member. Faculty mentors provide training in research techniques, scholarly knowledge, and written and oral communication skills that enable students to become successful independent researchers. Students publish research findings in prominent journals; present them at national meetings; develop teaching skills; and write grant applications. These experiences, and others, have helped our graduate students win numerous awards and prepared them for successful research in academia, government, or industry.

Collaborations

All provide training in evidence-based practice. Our faculty members also have research collaborations with the University of Pennsylvania Center for the Treatment and Study of Anxiety, the Helen F. Graham Cancer Center, the State of Delaware Department of Children, Youth, and Families, Head Start Centers, A. I. duPont Hospital for Children, a network of social service agencies in Philadelphia, and area schools.

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Program Requirements >

Work with our faculty.

Visit each researcher's bio page, linked below, for information on research interests and current funding.

The following faculty are accepting graduate students for 2025–2026: ​

  • Jean-Philippe Laurenceau
  • Jeffrey Spielberg
  • Institute for Community Mental Health  (co-mentorship with ICMH faculty)

View more research labs

Serving the community, advancing knowledge 

The Institute for Community Health (ICMH) at the University of Delaware stands as a pioneering initiative led by the clinical science faculty within the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences. Committed to transforming mental and behavioral healthcare, the ICMH integrates cutting-edge training, research, and clinical services to benefit the community.

This forward-thinking institute focuses on:

  • Establishing vital connections between academic research and community mental/behavioral health systems.
  • Enhancing access to science-based care for underserved populations.
  • Generating new knowledge in the field.

Six men and women in a meeting inside the office of the University of Delaware's Center for Training, Evaluation and Community Collaboration (CTECC), furnished with yellow upholstered chairs and desk.

Combining practice, collaboration and training

The ICMH strives to advance the quality of mental health services and promote equitable access to care through three interrelated entities:

  • Provides evidence-based psychotherapy and diagnostic assessments for all age groups.
  • Trains graduate students and professionals in evidence-based mental/behavioral health services.
  • Facilitates interdisciplinary research and integrated care with other STAR Tower clinics.
  • Partners with community agencies to train, implement and evaluate evidence-based practices within community settings.
  • Bridges academia and community stakeholders to enhance the development and effectiveness of psychological and behavioral treatments.
  • Trains graduate and undergraduate students to excel in real-world mental health settings.
  • Trains students in evidence-based practices and a scientific approach to clinical care.
  • Offers interdisciplinary training within STAR Tower's integrative healthcare environment.
  • Addresses workforce shortages by producing skilled mental health professionals in Delaware and surrounding states.

Future accreditation plans

The University of Delaware's program is accredited by the Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System and the American Psychological Association. 

We are committed to training clinical scientists who can ease the burden of mental illness and promote well-being in society through research, treatment development, and service delivery.  Our training opportunities emphasize continuity and interdependence across laboratory, clinical, and community contexts. Innovative training initiatives that break down traditional silos across the broad spectrum of clinical science require flexible pedagogy and implementation. 

The tenets and expectations of PCSAS are highly consistent with our training goals and methods, and we plan to maintain PCSAS accreditation indefinitely.

We plan to maintain APA accreditation until programs accredited by PCSAS are given the same access to internship and licensure opportunities as are programs accredited by APA.​

For questions regarding our accreditation, please contact the following for PCSAS and APA respectively:

Joseph E. Steinmetz, Executive Director Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System (PCSAS) 1101 E. 10th Street Bloomington, IN 47401 Phone: 479-301-8008 / Email:  [email protected] www.pcsas.org

Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation American Psychological Association 750 First Street NE, Washington, DC 20002 Phone: 202-336-5979 / E-mail:  [email protected] Web: accreditation.apa.org

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Clinical Health Psychology, MS

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Where a Clinical Health Psychology Will Take You

A Clinical Health Psychology, MS will prepare you to provide counseling and other mental health care to clients. Additionally, you will gain valuable research and statistical skills necessary for conducting and consuming research designed to improve diagnosis, treatment planning, psychotherapy process, psychotherapy outcomes, and risk assessment.

Career and Salary Outlook

The information in this table is meant to give you an idea of career opportunities with this degree. All information is pulled from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and is meant to be averages across the United States for 2022. Please note that these figures reflect overall averages and may not represent entry-level salaries.

Psychologists

$92,740 Median Salary

Overall employment of psychologists is projected to grow 6 percent from 2022 to 2032, faster than the average for all occupations.

About 12,800 openings for psychologists are projected each year, on average, over the decade. Many of those openings are expected to result from the need to replace workers who transfer to different occupations or exit the labor force, such as to retire.

Mental Health Counselors

$53,710 median salary.

Substance Abuse, Behavioral Disorder, and Mental Health Counselors

Employment of substance abuse, behavioral disorder, and mental health counselors is projected to grow 18 percent from 2022 to 2032, much faster than the average for all occupations.

About 42,000 openings for substance abuse, behavioral disorder, and mental health counselors are projected each year, on average, over the decade. Many of those openings are expected to result from the need to replace workers who transfer to different occupations or exit the labor force, such as to retire.

Social Workers

$58,380 Median Salary

Overall employment of social workers is projected to grow 7 percent from 2022 to 2032, faster than the average for all occupations.

About 63,800 openings for social workers are projected each year, on average, over the decade. Many of those openings are expected to result from the need to replace workers who transfer to different occupations or exit the labor force, such as to retire.

School and Career Counselors and Advisors

$61,710 Median Salary

Employment of school and career counselors and advisors is projected to grow 5 percent from 2022 to 2032, faster than the average for all occupations.

About 26,600 openings for school and career counselors and advisors are projected each year, on average, over the decade. Many of those openings are expected to result from the need to replace workers who transfer to different occupations or exit the labor force, such as to retire.

Human Resources Managers

$136,350 Median Salary

Employment of human resources managers is projected to grow 5 percent from 2022 to 2032, faster than the average for all occupations.

About 15,500 openings for human resources managers are projected each year, on average, over the decade. Many of those openings are expected to result from the need to replace workers who transfer to different occupations or exit the labor force, such as to retire.

Program Details

What you’ll study.

As part of the the MS in Clinical Health Psychology program, you'll take multiple courses in psychological assessment and neuropsychology, multiple courses in psychotherapy methods, multiple courses in statistics and research methods, and courses in health psychology, biopsychology, and professional ethics.  Additionally, you will have the option to take 6 elective credits OR to complete 6 Thesis credits. If you opt to complete a thesis, you will work individually with a faculty mentor to develop their own research study, collect data, write up their results, and present their thesis. For more information on what a master's thesis entails, download our Thesis Manual . As part of the program, you will complete two terms (6 credits) of professional practicum.  In practicum, you will work in a clinical setting in the community (e.g., hospital; assessment clinic; psychotherapy clinic) and be supervised by a licensed practitioner.  This allows you to take skills built in the classroom and apply them in real-world settings.

Practical Skills You’ll Gain

You will develop a base proficiency in cognitive behavioral therapy interventions, acceptance-and-commitment therapy interventions, and motivational interviewing interventions. Additionally, you will gain skills in common factors necessary for conducting effective therapy (e.g., establishing a treatment alliance; reflection; obtaining informed consent).  You will develop base proficiency with a number of psychological tests, including intelligence and achievement tests, personality and symptom tests, intake interviews, and assessment methods for assessing neuropsychological functioning and social functioning.  Finally, you will  develop skills for conducting statistical analyses and designing research studies; these skills are necessary for helping students conduct research (if they choose to do so) and for consuming research (i.e., staying updated on emerging trends in the field to ensure empirically supported practice of psychotherapy).

A wide variety of hands-on experiences are also available in our  internship ,  research , and  study abroad programs. Check out the pages for these programs, and talk to your professors to learn more.

Admissions Requirements

Our program requires:

  • A BA or BS degree in Psychology or a related field with a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 3.0
  • Undergraduate classes in Introductory Psychology, Abnormal Psychology, and Statistics required; Health Psychology and Research Methods recommended but not required
  • The Psychology (MS) program has decided to waive the GRE score requirement indefinitely.
  • If English not your native language, official scores from an accepted English Proficiency exam are required. Please see further information on our  How to Apply  page.
  • Personal statement instructions  for Clinical Health Psychology.
  • Three  letters of recommendation  (at least two of which are academic) are needed.

MS in Psychology admits for fall term only. Applications are due March 15th for admission in the following August/September term.

It has not been determined whether educational prerequisites provided by this program would satisfy licensure requirements in other states. Thus, if you are not planning to pursue LLP licensure in the state of Michigan following graduation from our program, we encourage you to contact the appropriate licensing agency in the state in which they are located or in the state in which they intend to seek future licensure. Information on how to  contact the licensure board  in other states.

If you are registering for this program from a state other than Michigan, you may be required to attest that you are aware that the program was designed to fulfill requirements for an LLP in the state of Michigan and/or that you are intending to pursue an LLP in the state of Michigan.

Ready to Apply?

Estimate your cost of attendance per semester.

Application Deadline

This program operates on a rolling admission basis. It is advised to submit all documents by the advisory deadline to ensure consideration for your preferred term and to facilitate pre-term planning. Advisory deadlines differ for domestic and international students.

Graduate Scholarships

Learn about scholarship opportunities for new and continuing graduate students.

How to Get Involved

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You can become a supplemental instructor or tutor, join the Psychology Students Association, present the results of your research at professional meetings, check out  general student organizations devoted to a wide range of interests and topics, and much more.

Become a part of the UM-Dearborn community and put your dreams to work for you.

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Clinical Psychology Graduate Programs: Falling Short in Cultural Humility Training

Affiliations.

  • 1 University of Southern California, Department of Psychology.
  • 2 University of New Mexico, Center on Alcohol, Substance Use, and Addictions.
  • 3 California State University, Dominguez Hills.
  • 4 Stanford University, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences.
  • 5 University of Pittsburgh, Department of Psychology.
  • 6 University of Pittsburgh, Department of Psychiatry.
  • 7 University of Virginia, Department of Psychology.
  • PMID: 39301226
  • PMCID: PMC11410367 (available on 2025-08-01 )
  • DOI: 10.1037/tep0000443

Despite requirements by the American Psychological Association and the Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System regarding training and education in cultural humility, questions remain regarding the presence and quality of the training in clinical psychology PhD and PsyD programs. This is a critical issue as inadequate training in diversity, cultural humility, and multiculturalism has substantial downstream effects on care for clients of color and may contribute to racial disparities and inequities in access to mental health services. We seek to explicitly evaluate key features of the conceptual model thought to improve the provision of mental health services for clients facing oppression and marginalization which includes perceptions of clinical psychology graduate programs' training in and assessment of cultural humility. We also assess self-efficacy related to the application of cultural humility as well as actual practice of actions associated with cultural humility. Each of these domains are evaluated among a sample of 300 graduate students and faculty, clinical supervisors, and/or directors of clinical training (DCTs) and differences across position and race of participants were tested. Study findings highlight significant gaps between what trainees need to develop cultural humility and what they may actually be receiving from their respective programs. While findings suggest that there is still a lot of work to be done, understanding the state of the field with regards to clinical training in cultural humility is an important first step towards change.

Keywords: clinical psychology; clinical training; cultural humility; graduate training; racism.

PubMed Disclaimer

Conflict of interest statement

The authors have no competing interests to declare.

  • Agner J (2020). Moving from cultural competence to cultural humility in occupational therapy: A paradigm shift. The American Journal of Occupational Therapy, 74(4), 7404347010p1 7404347010p7. 10.5014/ajot.2020.038067 - DOI - PubMed
  • American Psychological Association. (2017). Multicultural guidelines: An ecological approach to context, identity, and intersectionality. Retrieved May 21, 2022, from http://www.apa.org/about/policy/multiculturalguidelines.pdf
  • Bartholomew TT, Pérez-Rojas AE, Lockard AJ, Joy EE, Robbins KA, Kang E, & Maldonado-Aguiñiga S (2021). Therapists’ cultural comfort and clients’ distress: An initial exploration. Psychotherapy, 58(2), 275. 10.1037/pst0000331 - DOI - PubMed
  • Buchanan NT, Perez M, Prinstein MJ, & Thurston IB (2021). Upending racism in psychological science: Strategies to change how science is conducted, reported, reviewed, and disseminated. American Psychologist, 76(7), 1097–1112. 10.1037/amp0000905 - DOI - PubMed
  • Cook BL, Trinh NH, Li Z, Hou SSY, & Progovac AM (2017). Trends in racial-ethnic disparities in access to mental health care, 2004–2012. Psychiatric Services, 68(1), 9–16. 10.1176/appi.ps.201500453 - DOI - PMC - PubMed

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phd psychology clinical

M.A. Graduate Program in Psychological Sciences and Human Development

Introduction.

The Graduate Field of Psychological Sciences and Human Development (PSYHD)  includes faculty members from departments across the university including Psychology, Neurobiology and Behavior, Communication, and Philosophy.  The dominant strengths of the PSYHD Field lie in four broadly defined areas: Cognition , Development ,  Neuroscience , and Social and Personality . The goal of the Field is to educate students to become researchers, scholars, and teachers who will contribute to the future of psychology as a scientific discipline in academic or other research-oriented settings.

Our program prepares students for research and teaching careers in academic life, work in government agencies, and careers in industry or other public and private sectors.  We encourage you to explore the history of our M.A. and Ph.D. theses through the  Cornell University Theses/Dissertations guide .

Please note that we do not offer training in clinical psychology, marriage counseling or family, therapy.

To enter the PSYHD Masters (M.A.) program, you must  apply directly  to the Cornell University Graduate School. You may also want to investigate the  Cornell Graduate School  site for additional information about applying.

Application portal opens in October  Application portal closes on February 1 (11:59 pm)

Admission for the M.A. Program is only available in the Fall semester.

M.A. Program

We offer two M.A. Degrees:

•M.A. in Developmental Psychology •M.A. in Human Development and Family Studies

Masters Graduate Student Handbook (Quick Guide) can be found here: download PDF file

The M.A. in Human Development and Family Studies, or in Developmental Psychology, is a one-year program. The goal of the one-year master’s program is to provide an opportunity for qualified students to gain additional research experience and increase credentials for application to a Ph.D. or other advanced degree program where knowledge of Human Development may be helpful.

Student progress is supervised by a Special Committee comprised of two Psychological Sciences and Human Development graduate field faculty members. Because this is a two-semester program, students are accepted only when there are two faculty members available to mentor them. To see if there are faculty members whose research interests are compatible, students should review our  faculty research interests. Prospective students for the M.A. program should then contact those faculty directly before applying.

Application requirements

  • REQUIRED: Academic Statement of Purpose ( ASOP )
  • REQUIRED: Two letters of recommendation
  • REQUIRED: Personal Statement
  • REQUIRED: All minimum graduate school requirements

Currently, we neither require nor accept GRE scores in the application.

Contact our Graduate Field Administrator who oversees the M.A. Program ( Marianne Arcangeli ) with your questions or if you miss a deadline.

  • Apply  via the current Cornell University Graduate School application form.
  • Neither the department nor individual faculty will be able to fund students (by providing tuition, insurance, or a teaching or research assistantship) during the one-year (12-month) M.A. degree program.

Successful completion of the M.A. Program requirements

  • A total of 30 credit hours (15 in each semester) to include at least two formal, didactic courses in each semester. These courses must be instructional seminars, classic lecture courses, or other similar formal training courses (i.e., ‘didactic’). Graduate Research credit does not satisfy this requirement. The remaining credit hours should be devoted to either supplemental course work or research participation and students most often choose a combination of both. The specific courses, the type of research undertaken, and the content of the final thesis is decided jointly by the student and the chair of the Special Committee.
  • A written empirical thesis which can include, but is not limited to, extending an empirical honor’s thesis written while being involved in a faculty member’s lab, conducting an empirical research project, or conducting an empirical evaluation of a program.

Robert Sternberg, Director of Masters Studies Martha Van Rensselaer Hall, Room G101 E-mail:  [email protected]    Marianne Arcangeli, Graduate Field Assistant, Psychology  Martha Van Rensselaer Hall, Room G201B E-mail:  [email protected] Phone:  607-255-4661

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  24. Clinical Science

    The clinical science program in the Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences at the University of Delaware was established in 1968, has been continuously accredited by the American Psychological Association since 1975, and was accredited by the Psychological Clinical Science Accreditation System in 2011.

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    Please note that we do not offer training in clinical psychology, marriage counseling or family, therapy. To enter the PSYHD Masters (M.A.) program, you must apply directly to the Cornell University Graduate School. You may also want to investigate the Cornell Graduate School site for additional information about applying.