Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology
Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology
Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology
APA Accreditation Status
Questions related to the program’s accredited status can also be directed to the Commission on Accreditation. Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation
Faculty, Students, & Staff
Program faculty and their associated research groups, affiliated faculty, staff, and graduate students
Curriculum & License Requirements
The Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology is a full-time program that requires the completion of 83 semester hours over four years plus a full-time, one-year clinical internship.
Funding Information/Opportunities
Stipends, tuition, fees, costs, etc.
Application Information
Application information and requirements
Student Admissions, Outcomes, & Other Data
Data on students enrolled in our program
Prospective Students
Program highlights, trainings, internship training sites, etc.
Local Clinical Mental Health Job Opportunities
Diversity
The Ph. D. program in Clinical Psychology at Rowan University trains our graduate students in how to appropriately elicit the best in individuals by being respectful and informed about how individual differences and diversity affects values, attitudes, behaviors, and emotional responsiveness. All of our methods are based on evidence-based research and resources. We further believe that our graduate students search for individual differences and diversity in their professional lives requires a psychological understanding of how various unique variables (e.g. age, color, disability, ethnicity, gender, culture, language, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, and socioeconomic status) influence human motivation, goals, and mechanisms for growth and conflict resolution. Our Program maintains policies and practices that demonstrate a non-discriminatory atmosphere. Rowan University, the Department of Psychology and the Ph.D. Program in Clinical Psychology students, faculty, and staff are broadly diverse.
While there are numerous resources and readings in the diversity literature, the framework for our Program's view on diversity is based on three seminal readings. The first reading is the ADDRESSING framework by Pamela Hays (2008), an APA benchmark book on cultural sensitivity and variables of self-identity, which are the following: Age, Developmental (acquired; delayed), Developmental (congenital), Religion, Ethnicity/race, Social economic status, Sexual orientation, Indigenous background, National origin, Gender. Other areas are marital/partner status, medical history, health disparities, oppression, "isms", skin color, weight bias, etc. The second reading is the Counseling the Culturally Diverse: Theory and Practice, 6th Edition by Sue and Sue (2013). The overarching, guiding principles from this reading when working with diverse communities is ASK: Assessing biases and worldviews, Skills development and Knowledge acquisition. The third and final seminal reading is from the American Psychological Association's Guidelines on Multicultural Education, Training, Research, Practice, and Organizational Change for Psychologists.
Read the latest Student Diversity Committee Newsletter
Below please find an abbreviated list of additional resources addressing diversity (broadly defined).
- American Psychological Association's Guidelines on Multicultural Education, Training, Research, Practice and Organizational Change for Psychologists
- APAGS Committee for the Advancement of Racial and Ethnic Diversity (CARED)
- APA's Graduate Student Resources
- APA's Policy Statements on Disabilities Areas
- Resource Guide for Psychology Graduate Students of Color
- Rowan University Social Justice, Inclusion, and Conflict Resolution
- Rowan University Office of Equity and Diversity
- https://sites.rowan.edu/wan/
Contact
Jim A. Haugh, Ph.D.
Director of Clinical Training
Contact Information
Email: haugh@rowan.edu
Phone: 856-256-4500, x53781
Meredith Jones, Ph.D.
Associate Director of Clinical Training
Contact Information
Email: clinicalpsych@rowan.edu
Phone: 856-256-4500, x53778