Mar 28, 2024  
2019-2020 Graduate Catalog 
    
2019-2020 Graduate Catalog [FINAL EDITION]

Clinical Psychology


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Grading System

Grades are recorded as follows:

A 4.0 points
  A– 3.7
  B+ 3.3
B 3.0
  B– 2.7
  C+ 2.3
C 2.0
  C– 1.7*
F 0.0
I (Incomplete) 0.0
W (Withdrawal without prejudice) 0.0
P/NP (Pass/No Pass)** 0.0
AU (Audit—no credit) 0.0
*for physical therapy courses only
**only for courses offered on a Pass/No Pass basis
Note: Individual instructors may elect, at their discretion, not to use plus/minus grades.

Doctor of Psychology

Purpose

The Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology offers a course of studies and supervised experiences leading to the doctor of psychology (PsyD) degree. The overall purpose of the PsyD program is to prepare scholar-practitioners—that is, clinical psychologists who combine the science of psychology with practical clinical applications.

Objectives

  • Knowledge of the theory and practice of clinical psychology.
  • Skilled in applied psychology, including diagnostic psychological assessment, intervention, consultation and education, management and supervision, program evaluation, and outcome assessment.
  • Competence to practice in various settings with knowledge of and adherence to ethical and legal standards.
  • Leadership in the broader context of psychology, professional issues, and social, legal, and political concerns.

Accreditation

Widener’s graduate clinical psychology programs are accredited by the American Psychological Association (750 First Street, NE, Washington, DC 20002-4242; phone 202-336-5979).

Admission

The applicant must possess a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. A major in psychology is desirable but not essential. Students must have courses in statistics, abnormal psychology (or psychopathology), and research design (or experimental psychology) by the time they matriculate. Evaluation of the student’s ability to do graduate work will be based upon past academic performance and high scores on the Graduate Record Exam (GRE). Personal character and attributes of emotional maturity and stability and capacity for relating to and working with other people are major factors in acceptance. Evidence for these attributes is sought from records of past performance, letters of reference, work history, and a personal interview.

Applications, including all supporting credentials, must be submitted by December 7 of the year preceding matriculation. Applications are reviewed by a committee of faculty members. The top candidates are invited to participate in one of four interview days with a personal interview and orientation component. Participation in the interview day is neccessary to gain admission into the program. All final acceptance decisions are made by April 1. Approximately 20 percent of all candidates who apply are given an offer of admission. Spring or summer admission is not possible.

International Students

International students should consult the International Student Services Web page at www.widener.edu for international graduate student guidelines or contact the Office of International Student Services at Widener University; phone: 610-499-4499.

Matriculation

A matriculated student is one who has been accepted officially into the doctoral program. With the consent of the instructor and the director of the institute, a student may be exempted from repeating selected graduate courses. Please note that a waiver of any requirement for the degree must be approved in writing by the associate dean of the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology.

No provision is made for part-time or nonmatriculated students in the program. A maximum of seven calendar years is allowed for completion of the requirements for the doctoral degree from date of matriculation. In most instances, the program, including the exclusively affiliated APA-approved internship, is completed in five years.

Field Placement

Students are in field placement during each of the five years of training. The first three years are practica, which are introductory experiences designed to acquaint the students with a variety of clinical settings in which they can develop fundamental skills in the seven core competency areas. Each practicum offers progressively more responsibility and patient/staff interaction.

The last two years of the program comprise the accredited internship. The students enter the final two years of the integrated internship when all requirements of the first three years are met. The internship experience includes didactic course work including continuous case seminars and internship  rotations at various sites. Internship rotations consist of service units encompassing the varied settings in which professional psychologists practice. These settings, which may be oriented toward children, adolescents, or adults, include all types of mental health service activities ranging from inpatient to outpatient clinics, schools for the learning disabled, forensic-related placements, hospital units, community mental health facilities, neuropsychology clinics, rehabilitation centers, and organizations that consult to businesses. The integrated internship, which is taken three days a week over a two-year period, is considered equal to a full-time doctoral internship.

The intern’s role is that of a junior colleague who participates intensely in assessment, psychotherapy, and other types of intervention, management, consultation, and other specialized activities. Practicum students are beginners mastering the basics; interns are apprentice professionals honing skills, confidence, and competence.

The integrated internship with its various rotations is unique to Widener University’s PsyD program. In most programs, students must apply for appropriate internships independent of their graduate program. Although our students do apply, interview for, and are accepted to our various rotation sites, the internship itself is embedded in the program and relieves the student of the apprehension and inconvenience of an external process.

Curricular Clusters and Tracks

Given the multiple practice roles that characterize contemporary professional psychology, the faculty believe cultivating areas of interest is an important component of students’ training. A student’s decision to pursue an area of interest may determine that student’s course selection and possibly field placement and dissertation topic.

A student may pursue these clusters: cognitive/behavioral therapy, cross-cultural and diversity psychology, child/adolescent/family therapy, forensic psychology, organizational psychology, health psychology, and psychoanalytic psychology. The listings of courses constituting the curricular clusters is made available to students annually.

The Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology also has tracks in biofeedback, school psychology, and neuropsychology. Biofeed-back training and passing the examination leads to certification with the Biofeedback Certification Institute of America. The school psychology track leads to Pennsylvania certification as a school psychologist and is approved by the Pennsylvania Department of Education. The neuropsychology track prepares students to function as independent professional practitioners of clinical neuropsychology.

Acceptance for admission does not guarantee the student a place in a track. The tracks may have a limited number of slots. Students apply for a track no earlier than the second year of training and must be accepted in the track. Acceptance is based upon a variety of factors, including the student’s overall performance in the doctoral program.

To remain in a track, students may have to meet certain academic requirements. Additional fees are associated with the tracks. In addition, tracks may require that the students take summer courses.

Students can pursue a maximum of two curricular clusters or tracks simultaneously. Students enrolled in a joint degree program can only enroll in one curricular cluster or track at the same time. Some combinations of tracks, curricular clusters, and joint degrees are incompatible.

Joint Degree and Respecialization Programs

The institute offers several programs of study in addition to the traditional PsyD program:

  • The post-doctoral respecialization program is a three-year full-time program leading to a certificate of respecialization.
  • The joint degree program with the School of Business Administration offers two degree options: the PsyD with the general MBA, and the PsyD with the MBA in health care management (PsyD/MBA-HCM).
  • The joint degree program with master of arts in criminal justice leads to a PsyD/MACJ.
  • The joint degree program with master of education in human sexuality leads to the PsyD/MEd (human sexuality).

Students pay a total of five years of full-time tuition at the rate of the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology, with the exception of the respecialization program, which is three years of full-time tuition at the rate of the institute.  Candidates who complete the joint degree courses within the 18 credits allowable per semester (except during the first two years, during which the student is allowed to take only 15.5 credits) will do so without added tuition. However, a fee will be charged each semester in which the student is enrolled in the joint degree program. All joint degree program courses above 18 credits, during the third year and beyond, and those taken after five years in the PsyD program will be subject to additional tuition charges at the hourly semester rate of the respective program. Tuition per semester is calculated on a per-credit-hour basis and therefore varies with the number of credits taken.

Limitations to Combining Joint Degrees and Certificate-Granting Programs

Students who are accepted to study in the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology have the option of working toward one dual degree and no more than one other certificate-granting track in addition to a range of curricular clusters. Students should be aware, however, that not all of these programs and tracks are complimentary in relation to the sequencing of courses. Students admitted to the general PsyD/MBA program will not be able to enroll in the school psychology or neuropsychology tracks. Students admitted to the MBA-HCM option will maintain the ability to join the school psychology programs.

Psychology in Business Programs

Purpose

These unique multidisciplinary programs train clinical psychologists to apply psychological principles and knowledge of change processes in organizational settings. Through our core curriculum, applied field experiences, and professional development activities, students learn to integrate clinical psychology expertise with in-depth knowledge of organizational/business systems. Upon graduating, students will be prepared to take on leadership roles in health care administration, business management, and leadership development and training.

Training

Students spend five years in full-time residence at the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology to earn the PsyD degree. Beginning the summer following the first year of the PsyD program, students take additional courses working toward one of two degrees offered in the School of Business Administration:

  • Master of Business Administration (MBA)
  • Master of Business Administration in Heath Care Management (MBA-HCM)

In addition to the business classes, students in the MBA program take a core sequence of courses within the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology that serve to integrate the psychology and business school curricula. The courses listed below are sequenced to build cumulatively on each other and on the general clinical psychology curricula to instill the core competencies needed for psychologists to be successful in organizational settings.

  • Consulting and Organizational Psychology
  • Leadership Development
  • Executive Assessment
  • Executive Coaching
  • Organizational Change Management

Students gain hands-on supervised experience through placements in the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology’s Organizational Development Services (ODS) unit. Students will teach leadership skills in a group format, provide leadership and personality assessments, use those personality assessments as the basis of initiating productive coaching relationships, and may have opportunities to consult with organizations for development, team building, and change management with an  emphasis on organizational social responsibility. The dual degree culminates with the production of a dissertation that integrates the practice of psychology in organizational contexts.

Admissions

Students must first be accepted into Widener’s PsyD program. Each applicant must possess a BA or BS degree from an accredited institution. A major in psychology is desirable but not essential. Evaluation of the student’s ability to do graduate work is based upon academic performance and scores on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE). Personal character and attributes of emotional maturity, stability, and capacity for relating to and working with other people are major factors that are evaluated in reviewing applicants. Evidence for these attributes is sought from records of past performance, letters of reference, work history, and a personal interview.

During the second semester of the first year, interested students who are in good academic standing in the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology may apply to the psychology and business program. The application process entails a review of the applicant’s standing in the clinical psychology program, responses to essay questions demonstrating adequate interest and commitment, consultation with the business school dual degree advisor, and an in-person interview. After being accepted to a psychology and business program, students seek formal admission to the School of Business Administration. Students must sign a release form to have their application materials copied and forwarded from the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology to the School of Business Administration.

The Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology and the School of Business Administration will make every effort to accept all qualified applicants into the program. Nevertheless, graduate student status in the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology does not guarantee admission into a psychology and business program. Throughout their tenure in the program, students must maintain good standing in the clinical psychology program in order to take business courses.

Tuition

Students pay a total of five years of full-time tuition at the rate of the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology. Psychology in Business students who complete their School of Business Administration courses within the 18 credits allowable per semester (except during the first two years, during which students are allowed to take only 15.5 credits per semester) will do so without added tuition. There is no additional tuition charged for Business School classes taken in the summers of the first and second years. All School of Business Administration courses above 18 credits, those courses taken during summer sessions in years three and beyond, and those courses taken after five years in the PsyD program are subject to additional tuition charges at the School of Business Administration rate per semester hour.  A dual-degree administrative fee is charged by the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology each semester (fall or spring) while enrolled in the School of Business Administration.

Accreditations

The School of Business Administration programs are accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB) International. In addition, the MBA-HCM program is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation in Healthcare Management Education and is a full member of the Association of University Programs in Health Administration. The PsyD program and its exclusively affiliated internship are accredited by the American Psychological Association.

 

Programs

    Doctor of PsychologyDoctor of Pyschology/Master of ArtsDoctor of Psychology/Master of Business AdministrationDoctor of Psychology/Master of Business Administration in Health Care ManagementDoctor of Pyschology/Master of EducationCertificate

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