Educational Psychology, Clinical Psychology for Spanish/English Bilinguals Concentration (M.A.) - Graduate - 2009 University Catalog
You are viewing the 2009 University Catalog. Please see the newest version of the University Catalog for the most current version of this program's requirements.
The Clinical Psychology Concentration for Spanish-English Bilingual Psychologists prepares graduates to function in applied mental health settings that have a significant Spanish-speaking clientele by providing students with coursework and supervised experience that is relevant to working with this population.
ADMISSIONS
All applicants must meet the admission requirements for graduate study at MSU. In addition, applicants must meet the following departmental requirements.
- 12 undergraduate credits in psychology including a course in statistics and a laboratory course in experimental psychology.
- The Advanced Psychology Test of the Graduate Record Examination (for the M.A. in Psychology and the School Psychologist Certification programs only).
- Approval by the departmental committee.
EDUC PSYC w/CONC:ClinPsycSpan/EngBiling
Complete 36 semester hours including the following 4 requirement(s):
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Required Courses
Complete to earn 12 semester hours
PSYC 510 Research Methods in Psychology 3 PSYC 561 Developmental Psychology 3 PSYC 578 Psychological Tests and Measurements 3 PSYC 660 Current Topics in Educational Psychology 3 -
Specialization Requirements
Complete to earn 21 semester hours
PSYC 551 Mental Health Issues of Hispanics 3 PSYC 574 Individual Intelligence Testing 3 PSYC 575 Projective Techniques I 3 PSYC 593 Clinical Interviewing 3 PSYC 667 Abnormal Psychology 3 PSYC 670 Introduction to Psychotherapy 3 PSYC 680 Externship in Clinical Psychology 3 -
Required Elective
Complete 3 semester hours from the following approved electives:
ANTH 538 Ethnopsychology 3 COUN 559 Dynamics of Group Process 1-3 COUN 581 Community Resources 3 COUN 590 Counseling the Alcoholic and the Substance Abuser 3 FCST 542 Dynamics of Family Interaction 3 FCST 544 Intercultural Study of Family 3 PSYC 552 General Social Psychology 3 PSYC 582 Behavior Modification 3 PSYC 685 Psychoanalytic Theory 3 SOCI 574 Sociology of Ethnic Relationships 3 SOCI 577 Sociology of Poverty in the United States 3 -
Comprehensive Examination
Successfully complete the comprehensive examination.
Course Descriptions:
ANTH538: Ethnopsychology
This is an interdisciplinary course on convergencies of theoretical and methodological concepts from anthropology and psychology. There is a cross-cultural focus on the relationship of culture to personality, cognition, stress, mental disorders, and aging. Cross listed with Psychology, PSYC 538. 3 sh.
COUN559: Dynamics of Group Process
A laboratory-based course for the development of group skills and understandings. Focus is on experimental learning and personal growth. Readings in human interaction theory will be related to actual group participation. 1 - 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Graduate students with majors in the CNEL department only or undeclared graduate students.
COUN581: Community Resources
This course deals with the various agencies, industries and institutions available in the surrounding communities for use in guiding and referring clients. In addition to becoming familiar with the location and nature of these facilities, students learn the techniques for arranging client interviews and visits. Class discussion and personal research are supplemented by field trips. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Graduate students with majors in the Counseling, Human Development and Educational Leadership Department only; and COUN 577.
COUN590: Counseling the Alcoholic and the Substance Abuser
Describes methods of assessment, treatment planning and charting. Explains the defense structure of the substance abuser. Discusses ethical issues and counseling with special populations as well as children and adult children of alcoholics. Demonstrates individual and group counseling skills. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Graduate students with majors in the CNEL department only.
FCST542: Dynamics of Family Interaction
Critical review of concepts and theories, both psychological and sociological, currently used in understanding patterns and problems of family relationships. 3 sh.
FCST544: Intercultural Study of Family
Analytical study of cross cultural regularities and differentials in family structures. Functions and impact of social change on family values and patterns. Varied conceptual approaches to the study of family as well as a broad acquaintance with empirical studies and research. 3 sh.
PSYC510: Research Methods in Psychology
This course provides the essentials needed to read, understand and critically evaluate research reports. Students will also learn how to carry out the entire research process, starting with identifying the research problem and ending with a thesis or research report. Factorial analysis of variance and the major multiple correlational designs are explained. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Undergraduate laboratory course in experimental psychology.
PSYC551: Mental Health Issues of Hispanics
This course will familiarize the student with the personal, social, cultural and institutional forces that affect the mental health of Hispanics and Hispanic Americans and how these impact on treatment issues. The course will explore the heterogeneity of the Hispanic groups in the United States and how these groups respond in unique ways to the various services offered in community mental health settings. 3 sh.
PSYC552: General Social Psychology
This course surveys and analyzes the theoretical and empirical literature of modern social psychology. Among topics dealt with are the social psychology of the psychology experiment, attitude development and change, group processes and conflict, role theory, ecological psychology, socialization, organizations and work places, and a number of other themes and issues focused on the individual's relationship to the larger social structure. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Undergraduate work in psychology or sociology.
PSYC561: Developmental Psychology
Philosophical, conceptual, theoretical and research issues pertinent to human development from prenatal life to adulthood are presented. The core conceptual issues of development, such as the nature-nurture controversy, the continuity-discontinuity issue, and the issue of stability-instability, are discussed, and their relationships to the major theories in developmental psychology are examined. 3 sh.
PSYC574: Individual Intelligence Testing
Students learn how to administer, score and interpret individual intelligence tests. Theories of intelligence and the appropriateness of the tests to specific populations are discussed. Students administer and report on the three Wechsler Intelligence Scales and the Stanford-Binet(4th Edition), Development Achievement Scales, Adaptive Behavior Scales, and other cognitive assessment techniques. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Departmental approval and approved certification candidacy in the School Psychology program, the Bilingual Clinical concentration, or the Child/Adolescent Clinical programs.
PSYC575: Projective Techniques I
The basic instruments of projective testing, particularly the Bender Visual Motor Gestalt Test, DAP, HTP, TAT, TEMAS, and Sentence Completion Tests are studied. Students will also understand how cultural diversity impacts on assessment. Instruments are reviewed from the standpoints of basic research and the mechanics of administration and scoring. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Departmental approval and approved certification candidacy in the School Psychology Program, the Bilingual Clinical concentration or the Child/Adolescent Clinical programs.
PSYC578: Psychological Tests and Measurements
This course surveys the theory, construction and application of psychological tests. Topics include the statistical concepts underlying measurement; reliability and validity; critical analyses of selected intelligence, ability and personality tests; evaluation and interpretation of test data in practical situations; and the role of testing in clinical, educational and remedial settings. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Departmental approval, and an undergraduate Psychology statistics course or equivalent.
PSYC582: Behavior Modification
This course reviews applications of conditioning principles to changing human behavior in clinical, educational, occupational and community settings. Selected topics include operant and classical conditioning, social learning theory, token economies, experimental design, cognitive behavior modification, aversive control, cognitive restructuring, biofeedback, and ethical issues in behavior modification. The course is designed to enable students to construct and implement behavior modification programs. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Departmental approval, and an undergraduate course in learning or the equivalent.
PSYC593: Clinical Interviewing
This course integrates the theory and practice of clinical interviewing. The goals of this course are to facilitate the development of the student's listening, diagnostic, and therapeutic interviewing skills. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Departmental approval, and 12 graduate credits in Psychology or related fields.
PSYC660: Current Topics in Educational Psychology
Several important contemporary theoretical, applied and methodological issues in various areas of educational psychology are selected by the class for inclusion in the course. Seminar discussions focus on the critical evaluation of the recent literature in the areas selected. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: PSYC 510, and 561, and graduate Psychology majors only.
PSYC667: Abnormal Psychology
This course focuses on theoretical models and selected research in psychopathology. Topics include contemporary nosology, diagnostic problems, schizophrenia, anxiety and affective disorders, social deviance, somatoform and psychophysiological syndromes, and therapeutic intervention. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: PSYC 561.
PSYC670: Introduction to Psychotherapy
This course surveys theories, research and practices in individual and group psychotherapy, and introduces the student to various treatments for emotional maladjustment and behavioral pathology. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Permission of instructor.
PSYC680: Externship in Clinical Psychology
This course is a supervised, two semester, clinical experience designed to provide the skills necessary for professional practice in Mental Health Clinics or other settings where there is a significant Hispanic clientele. On-site supervision will take place under the direction of a fully licensed clinical psychologist (the field-based supervisor) in close cooperation with the Bilingual Clinical Program Director at Montclair State. The student will also meet with a Montclair State faculty supervisor on a weekly basis. At least one of the supervisors will be a bilingual/bicultural individual. A contract will be signed between the student intern, field-based supervisor and the Montclair faculty supervisor before the start of the internship. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: Departmental approval, and matriculated status in the Clinical Psychology for Spanish/English Bilinguals Concentration, and permission of the program director.
PSYC685: Psychoanalytic Theory
Through the reading of primary sources, students will become familiar with the development of Freudian psychoanalytic theory and its use in psychoanalysis. Current directions in psychoanalytic theory will also be explored. Particular emphasis will be placed on the emergence of object-relations theory as well as self psychology. The work of Klein, Winnicott, Mahler, and Kohut will be examined. Overall, the course will emphasize the convergence of theory and technique. 3 sh.
Prerequisites: PSYC 580 or 667.
SOCI574: Sociology of Ethnic Relationships
This course will analyze relationships among ethnic groups, and evaluate the causes, consequences and resolution of ethnic conflict. It will also consider the various policy implications of discrimination in institutional contexts. 3 sh.
SOCI577: Sociology of Poverty in the United States
This course examines major contemporary definitions and ideologies of poverty and public welfare, and considers the extent and patterns of distribution of poverty. Alternative socio-economic explanations of poverty and their implications for policy will be assessed, and problem-solving aspects of program and policy research analyzed. 3 sh.
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