September 10, 2008
Thirty-two faculty, graduate students, and alumni from St.
John’s University’s graduate psychology programs traveled to Boston
to attend the American Psychological Association (APA) 116th annual
convention.
With 148,000 members, APA is the largest association of
psychologists worldwide. Thus, the APA Convention attracts a large
number of psychologists each year in all arenas of psychology, from
clinical psychologists to psychopharmacologists to behavioral
neuroscientists to school psychologists. Graduate students,
academics, and practitioners gather to network and present the
latest research in the field.
St. John’s faculty, graduate students, and alumni delivered an
impressive total of 22 presentations on their newest research in
the field of psychology. This level of participation and the
quality of the presentations and research highlights the
outstanding work currently being conducted at St. John’s
University.
Although students and faculty from graduate psychology programs
have been attending APA annual conventions since the 1980’s, the
2008 Convention saw the highest number of research projects
accepted from St. John’s in recent memory. Applicants throughout
the nation submit their research for an opportunity to present at
APA because the convention is prestigious, honoring the critical
role of psychology. To be accepted as a presenter at this
nationally recognized conference is an honor for any
participant.
Conventions such as APA are an opportunity for faculty and
students across programs to come together to present on similar
topics of interest. While there were a number of impressive
presentations, one collaborative effort involved Jeffrey Nevid,
Ph.D. and Wilson McDermut, Ph.D. from the Clinical Psychology
Program and Mark Terjesen, Ph.D. and doctoral candidate Robin
Sakakini from the School Psychology Program, along with Dr. Mark
Sciutto of Muhlenberg College in Pennsylvania presented their own
ideas and/or research in the symposium, “Undergraduate and Graduate
Psychopathology Courses: Implications for Instruction and
Training.”
Beverly Greene, Ph.D. represented St. John’s in an impressive
three symposiums, as a discussant, a presenter, and a chair. They
included, respectively: Women and Spirituality: Freeing,
Affirmative Creativity; Actualization, Resilience and Resistance:
Queer Women Psychologists Strategize in Response to Hate Crimes;
and Teaching Cultural Diversity in Mental Health Curriculums:
Matching Syllabi to Setting.
Raymond DiGiuseppe, Ph.D., Chair of the Department of
Psychology, spoke at the symposium, “Innovating Evidence-Based
Practice with Session-by-Session Outcome Measures.”
In addition to the recognition afforded those presenting their
outstanding research and scholarship, APA’s annual convention also
offers the opportunity for individual recognition and honors. One
individual honored this year was St. John’s faculty member John
Hogan, Ph.D., who was recently elected president of Division 1,
General Psychology, one of 54 divisions within APA and also the
largest.
"As the professional psychological organization that recognizes
all disciplines within psychology, it was a great honor just to see
the level of current student, faculty, and alumni involvement at
this years annual APA conference,” remarked Dr. Terjesen. “St.
John's University always does well in terms of attendance and
presentation at a number of professional conferences and the
involvement of so many individuals this year is further reflective
of the values of life-long professional development, the importance
of dissemination of scientific knowledge as well as the recognition
that the St. John's community receives from the field.”
Highlights of the convention included the keynote address by
Malcolm Gladwell, staff writer for The New Yorker magazine and
best-selling author of Blink and The Tipping Point:
How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference, along with
addresses by well-known psychologist David H. Barlow and author
John Elder Robison (Look Me in the Eye: My Life with
Asperger’s), among others.
For more information about the graduate programs in psychology,
please contact Dr. Raymond DiGiuseppe, department chair, at digiuser@stjohns.edu or
(718) 990-6368.