B.S., MS, Ph.D.
Professor
Room 113B Marillac Hall
(718) 990-5381
hoganj@stjohns.edu
Biography
Dr. Hogan received his PhD in Developmental Psychology from Ohio
State University, 1970. He received a MS in Counseling Psychology,
minor in Statistics, Iowa State University, 1962. he earned a BS in
Biology, with minors in Chemistry and Philosophy, St. John’s
University, NY. 1960. He is a Licensed Psychologist: in State
of New York #7774.
DR. Hogan’s major areas of interest are the history of
psychology, international psychology and developmental psychology.
He author/editor of two books, 15 chapters, and more than 200
articles, encyclopedia entries and book reviews. He presented
more than 100 papers at professional meetings.
American Psychological
Association: Served on the Executive Committee of Div.
1 (General Psychology) and Div. 52 (International Psychology), as
well as serving as Program Chair for each division.
Member-at- large and historian of Div. 52. Continue to serve
as a site visitor, Committee on Accreditation,
1986-present.
Eastern Psychological
Association: Served as historian and member of the
Board, presenting five lectures on the history of psychology at the
annual meeting of EPA (2001-2005). In 2007, selected to
present the first lecture in an endowed lecture series honoring
Virginia Staudt Sexton, a former faculty member at
SJU.
New York State Psychological
Association (NYSPA): Elected president of the Academic
Division (twice) and president of the Division of Adult Development
and Aging. Served on various committees including serving as Chair
of the Ethics Committee and Chair of the Awards Committee.
Received numerous awards from NYSPA including the Distinguished
Service Award, the Wilhelm Wundt Award, the Kurt Lewin Award, the
David Mitchell Award, and the Allen V. Williams Award, their
highest award, for Lifetime Contributions to Psychology.
New York Academy of
Sciences: Completed a two-year term as Chair of the
Section on Psychology (2006). Member of the Program Committee
since 2000. Recipient of the first Helmut E. Adler Award of
the New York Academy of Sciences for "outstanding contributions to
the history of psychology." October, 2002.
Psi Chi: Moderated and
co-moderated the local chapter of Psi Chi, the National Honor
Society in Psychology; served on the National Council of Psi Chi
(twice); served as national Psi Chi historian; and was the keynote
speaker at the 75th anniversary of the founding of Psi Chi, held at
Yale University in 2004. Received four service awards from
Psi Chi and a Thelma Hunt Research Award.
St. John’s University: Presented
with the Outstanding Faculty Achievement Award, May 1999; recipient
of the Excellence in Teaching and Scholarship Award—Graduate, June,
2000; appointed a Fellow of the Teaching and Learning Center,
2000-2001; Grand Marshall, St. John's University Commencement,
January, 2001.
Department of Psychology: Served
on several committees, including Undergraduate Educational Policy
Committee and Graduate Educational Policy Committee. He was
recently elected to an 11th 3-year term as a member of the
Psychology Department P&B (the Personnel and Budget
Committee). John has mentored 26 doctoral dissertations and
served on 140 doctoral committees.
In January, 2006, he began a three-year term as Section Editor
for the American Psychologist, the most widely circulated
professional psychology journal in the world. In 2006, he was
the co-founder of an organization of Psychology Historians of New
York who are documenting the history of psychology in New York
City.
Representative Publications
Books
Sexton, V. S., & Hogan, J. D. (Eds.) (1992).
International psychology: Views from around the
world. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.
Thompson, D. N., & Hogan, J. D. (Eds.) (1996). A history
of developmental psychology in
autobiography. Madison, WI: Brown and Benchmark.
Chapters
Hogan, J. D., & Sussner, B. D. (2000). European influences
on U.S. developmental psychology: A historical perspective.
In A. L. Comunian and U. P. Gielen (Eds.). International
perspectives on human development (pp. 9-37). Lengerich,
Germany: Pabst Science Publishers.
Hogan, J. D., & Sussner, B. D. (2001). Cross-cultural
psychology in historical perspective. In L. L. Adler and U.
Gielen (Eds.). Cross-cultural topics in psychology
(2nd ed.). New York, NY: Praeger.
Hogan, J. D. (2001). Reminiscences of Psi Chi. In S. Davis
and M. Wertheimer (Eds.). An oral history of Psi Chi (pp.
136-140). Chattanooga, TN: Psi Chi, the National Honor Society in
Psychology.
Hogan, J. D. (2003). June Etta Downey: Pioneer of psychological
measurement. In G. Kimble and M. Wertheimer, Portraits of
pioneers in psychology, Volume V. (pp. 111-124).
Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Hogan, J. D. (2003). G. Stanley Hall: Educator, innovator,
pioneer of developmental psychology. In G. Kimble and M.
Wertheimer, Portraits of pioneers in psychology, Volume V.
(pp. 19-36). Washington, DC: American Psychological
Association.
Hogan, J. D. (2003). Anne Anastasi.: Master differential
psychologist and psychometrician. In G. Kimble and M.
Wertheimer, Portraits of pioneers in psychology, Volume V.
(pp. 263-277). Washington, DC: American Psychological
Association.
Hogan, J. D., & Vaccaro, T. P. (2006). The history of
international psychology. In M. J. Stevens and U. P.
Gielen (Eds.), Toward a global psychology.
Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Hogan, J. D., & Vaccaro, T. P. (2006).
Internationalizing the history of developmental psychology.
In A. Brock (Ed.), Internationalizing the history of
psychology. New York: New York University Press.