Home >
Diversity in CPSY Program
Diversity
in CPSY program
We strive to create a training environment that promotes self-awareness,
skills development, and experiences that enable our graduates
to develop and share knowledge regarding multicultural and
diversity issues as well as to provide effective, culturally
sensitive services to a variety of individuals in our society.
We believe that this is best accomplished through a multifaceted
approach; hence, we are committed to recruiting a diverse
student body, incorporating diversity and multicultural training
throughout our curriculum, and promoting an environment in
which diversity is valued and respected. We integrate the
critical multicultural
competencies for training that were developed by the American
Counseling Association and by the American Psychological
Association into our training program and outcome expectations
for training, consistent with our training values.
Recruiting
a diverse student body. We believe that multicultural
competency is supported by classroom learning that integrates
diverse viewpoints and a broad range of experience. The reciprocal
training that students provide to each other through active
discussion, sharing of opinions and experiences, and through
respectful discovery of values, biases, and attitudes beneath
interactions, course content, research results, etc. is an
irreplaceable asset to the training environment. Thus, we
attempt to recruit a diverse student body, particularly with
respect to ethnic group membership, second language skills,
and experience with oppressed or marginalized groups. Approximately
48% of our current students are members of American ethnic
minority groups, 10% are self-identified L G B T Q, and a
number of our students have been first generation college
students. (The faculty does not request information about
sexual orientation or religious affiliation in application
materials nor do we attempt to gather this information from
current students.) However, discussion of the intersection
of religious beliefs, sexual orientation, and the intersection
of professional and personal (cultural, religious, sexual
orientation) identity development is raised in doctoral seminars,
meetings with advisors, our Ethnic
Diversity Affairs Committee (EDAC)
meetings, and other venues on a regular basis. The ratio of
male students has decreased over the past 10 years, reflective
of larger trends within the profession.
Incorporating
diversity and multicultural training throughout our curriculum.
In coursework such as Psychological Assessment I and II and
Theories of Career Development, the appropriateness of assessment
and interventions for clients of different ethnic groups,
lesbian and gay clients, clients with disabilities, and other
client populations are integrated. Our course Counseling Diverse
Populations provides students with the opportunity to explore
their own values, biases, and attitudes around ethnic diversity,
sexual orientation, and gender, to review research and practice
literature, and to explore their own ethnic identity. The
Advanced Individual Interventions integrates ethnic and other
types of diversity in readings and class discussion. Community
and Preventive Interventions focuses on human diversity, issues
of poverty and social injustice, and on how to ethically and
responsibly provide prevention and intervention within environments
that perpetuate systematic oppression. Given the makeup of
Eugene, practicum experiences largely involve providing services
to European American clients, but various sites (e.g. Lane
Community College) provide opportunities to work with
clients from widely ranging educational and socioeconomic
backgrounds as well as some ethnic diversity. Faculty
members attempt to integrate theory and practice related
to understanding the role of human diversity into each course.
And, our goal is to continually improve our attention to human
diversity in classes.
Promoting
an environment in which diversity is valued and respected.
Faculty members attempt to model
respect for diversity through verbal behavior and action,
including through our research. To varying degrees, faculty
members attend directly to issues that have covert racist,
homophobic, or otherwise intolerant themes. This occurs, for
instance, in the context of practicum supervision, classroom
discussion, and EDAC
meetings. By modeling that conversations about race, ethnicity,
gender, sexual orientation, disability, and religion are difficult
but important, we hope to promote an environment where such
conversations are normative. Faculty
members acknowledge our own limitations and needs to continue
our growth and development in improving our own multicultural
competence. We select students who demonstrate a commitment
to diversity. Students, to varying degrees, address diversity
issues in and outside of the classroom. Faculty
and student scholarship reflects attention to and valuing
of diversity. For example, in August of 2000 a group of Counseling
Psychology Doctoral students offered a symposium at APA entitled
“Racism in therapy and supervision” to discuss
training suggestions for helping ethnic minority student therapists
and supervisees deal with racism expressed by clients and
supervisors. Each year since 1999 our students have organized
APA symposia of this nature. Other examples of how we value
human diversity are the research, service, and clinical activities
of faculty. Drs. Benedict
and Ellen McWhirter
participate in community service, research, and consultation
every year in Santiago, Chile. This enhances their global
perspective of human diversity. Dr.
Beth Stormshak has been involved in several ongoing grants
targeting families at risk including Native American and Latino
Head Start families from rural Oregon. Counseling Psychology
students have had opportunities to be involved in this research
by conducting parent interviews, observing children in classrooms,
and conducting parent training groups. Dr.
Ellen McWhirter has focused her scholarly work in the
areas of adolescent career development, with an emphasis on
ethnic minority adolescents, and on using the counseling process
as a vehicle of empowerment, which involves a multicultural
approach to counseling. Dr.
Krista Chronister conducts research with women of diverse
economic means who experience interpersonal violence. All
faculty are committed to infusing
questions about human diversity and multiculturalism in student
research work as well.
|
|