Psychology, Clinical-Community
College of Liberal Arts
Department of Psychology
907-474-7012
UAF-PSYPHD@alaska.edu
ayphd@uaa.alaska.edu
http://psyphd.alaska.edu
Ph.D. Degree
Minimum Requirements for Degree: 115 credits
The Ph.D. program in Clinical-Community Psychology is accredited by the American Psychological Association as a clinical psychology program.
The Ph.D. program in Clinical-Community Psychology with a Rural, Indigenous Emphasis is a partnership between the departments of psychology at UAF and UAA. Although the degree is awarded by UAF, students can complete the entire degree program at either campus. All program courses are co-taught across campuses via video conference and all program components are delivered by faculty at both campuses. The student experience is identical regardless of students' city of residence (Fairbanks or Anchorage). The program focus includes clinical, community and cross-cultural psychology with an emphasis on indigenous, Alaska Native and American Indian psychology. As a UAF-UAA partnership, the program integrates the strengths and resources of both campuses to advance academic excellence, promote innovative and practical research, and provide solid graduate training in clinical-community psychology.
The program ensures that graduates have obtained the full range of clinical training mandated for doctoral-level clinical psychologists and will be adequately prepared for licensure as psychologists.
Students apply to the joint Ph.D. program in Clinical-Community Psychology at both UAF and UAA. All applicants must submit identical application materials to both institutions; materials are collected and evaluated by the joint UAF/UAA Ph.D. admissions committee which makes admissions recommendations to the dean of the UAF graduate school. Applicants may specify a preference for either campus as a location for their studies. For more information about the application process, visit the program website.
Graduate Program -- Ph.D. Degree
Admission Requirements
- Application deadline: Received by Feb. 1 for the following fall admission. This is the only opportunity for program admission each year.
- Compliance with the university requirements for a doctoral degree and admission to graduate studies as detailed in the UAF catalog.
- Minimum of a bachelor's degree (B.S. or B.A. or B.Ed.); major in psychology or related field preferred. All requirements for bachelor's degree must be completed by June 30 prior to matriculation.
- Minimum undergraduate grade point average of 3.0.
- Minimum 3.0 grade point average in major and in all psychology courses.
- Course work in the areas of abnormal psychology, statistics, research methods and one of the following: personality, clinical psychology, social psychology or community psychology. All prerequisite course work must be completed by June 30 prior to matriculation.
- Letter of intent describing the applicant's interest and purpose in studying clinical-community psychology, the reasons why a Ph.D. in clinical-community psychology at UAF/UAA is sought at this point in the applicant's professional development, and demonstrating an understanding of relevant professional ethics.
- Professional vita, including documentation regarding academic, research and professional experiences, special projects and activities, and recognitions or honors.
- Three professional references (preferably curriculum or research advisors, major course instructors with whom the student had contact in more than one course, and/or supervisors). Each reference must have been contacted to provide a signed and completed reference rating form and letter of support. Reference rating forms are located at http://psyphd.alaska.edu/admissions.htm.
- A disclosure statement must accompany the application to the program. Lifetime criminal background check must be submitted by students invited to a personal interview at least two weeks prior to the interview. Additional information on the disclosure statement and FBI criminal background check is located at http://psyphd.alaska.edu/admissions.htm.
- Students admitted to the Ph.D. program have the option to obtain the UAA M.S. degree in clinical psychology.
Graduation Requirements
- Complete the general university requirements.
- Complete the program and additional requirements listed below:
Program Requirements
Students must complete 26 required courses (for a total of 70 credits), 18 credits of dissertation, 18 credits of predoctoral internship and 9 credits of electives. Students must accumulate a minimum of 115 credits to graduate and must have completed all required course work. Students entering the program with a masters degree in psychology or related field must complete at least two years of full-time course work, 18 credits of dissertation, and one year of predoctoral internship, all approved by the student's advisory committee.
Students admitted to the PhD program have the option to obtain the UAA M.S. degree in clinical psychology.
- Cultural experience: During their first year in the Ph.D. program, students must participate in a cultural experience as defined by program faculty. The actual experience varies from year to year, but includes direct exposure to Alaska Native and other cultural world views, values and life experiences through contact with cultural elders and advisors. The goal of the cultural experience is to provide an opportunity to interact directly with cultures in a non-classroom setting.
- Complete the following required courses:
PSY F602--Native Ways of Knowing--3 credits
PSY F603--Alaska and Rural Psychology--3 credits
PSY F604--Biological and Pharmacological Bases of Behavior--3 credits
PSY F605--History and Systems--1 credit
PSY F607--Cognition, Affect and Culture--3 credits
PSY F611--Ethics and Professional Practice--3 credits
PSY F612--Human Development in a Cultural Context--3 credits
PSY F616--Program Evaluation and Community Consultation I--3 credits
PSY F617--Program Evaluation and Community Consultation II--3 credits
PSY F622--Multicultural Psychopathology--3 credits
PSY F623--Intervention I--3 credits
PSY F629--Intervention II--3 credits
PSY F632--Community Psychology Across Culture--3 credits
PSY F633--Tests and Measurement in Multicultural Context--3 credits
PSY F639--Research Methods--3 credits
PSY F652--Practicum Placement -- Clinical I--3 credits
PSY F653--Practicum Placement -- Clinical II--3 credits
PSY F657--Quantitative Analysis--3 credits
PSY F658--Qualitative Analysis--3 credits
PSY F672--Practicum Placement -- Community I--3 credits
PSY F679--Multicultural Psychological Assessment I--3 credits
PSY F681--Substances of Abuse in Alaska--1 credit
PSY F682--Substance Abuse Assessment and Treatment Planning--1 credit
PSY F683--Clinical Interventions in Substance Abuse--1 credit
PSY F686--Predoctoral Internship--18 credits
PSY F699D--Dissertation--18 credits
Electives--9 credits - Minimum credits required: 115 credits
Additional Requirements
- Clinical Competency: Clinical competency is demonstrated through preparation of a clinical portfolio that will be evaluated by an ad hoc committee. Criteria for the portfolio will be clearly defined and samples will be provided for students. Students must demonstrate clinical competency before applying to advance to the predoctoral internship and must pass both the clinical competency and community competency before starting the predoctoral internship.
- Research Competency: Research competency is demonstrated through preparation of a research portfolio that will be evaluated by an ad hoc committee. Criteria for the portfolio will be clearly defined and samples will be provided for students.
- Advancement to Candidacy: Before students are allowed to register for dissertation credits, they will be reviewed for performance by the joint UAF/UAA Ph.D. committee, using existing university standards and forms for advancement to candidacy. Review will be based on faculty experience with students to date, submitted paperwork and student's progress through the program. Feedback from the review will be provided to the student by her or his advisor. The program defines the comprehensive exam as being met through passing the required competency portfolios. All portfolios must be passed for the comprehensive exam to be fully passed. Passing one portfolio qualifies the student for a conditional pass on the comprehensive exam, which is sufficient for the advancement to candidacy.
- Doctoral Dissertation Proposal Defense: Before commencing data collection for a dissertation project, students must defend their proposal to their dissertation committee. The defense must be based on a written dissertation proposal to be distributed to the dissertation committee after approval by the dissertation chair. The defense will be an oral presentation to the committee by the student and will not be a public meeting. For data-collection-based dissertations, the proposal must also be approved by the UAF or UAA Institutional Review Board before data collection can commence.
- Doctoral Dissertation: A doctoral dissertation must be carried out successfully and approved by a doctoral dissertation committee. The dissertation committee will consist of at least four members. It is recommended that the dissertation chair be on the same campus as the student. There must be at least one committee member from each psychology department at UAF and UAA. Content areas can vary widely, but must be related to clinical, community, or cross-cultural issues and applicable in Alaska settings.
- Advancement to Internship: Students must apply to the local program director by Sept. 30 (the fall semester prior to the year during which the student seeks to complete the internship) stating their intent to advance to internship. For most students this will mean that the application needs to be made in the fall of the third year in the program. The program director will notify the core faculty committee, who will review the students' course work, assure that adequate progress has been made toward all prior milestones (i.e., clinical competency, doctoral dissertation outline [the outline must be completed, submitted and approved by the chair] and advancement to candidacy) before approving the student for internship and before writing a letter of support for the student. Students must fully pass the clinical portfolio before starting the internship. Failure to pass the clinical portfolio will result in the student not being eligible to enroll in internship credits.
- Predoctoral Internship: A full-time, one-year predoctoral internship is required. This internship should meet the criteria laid out by the American Psychological Association; selection of an Association of Psychology Postdoctoral and Internship Centers-approved internship is encouraged. Placements in Alaska are preferred, but not required.
- APA Ethical Guidelines: Strict compliance with APA ethical guidelines is required throughout participation in the degree program. Violations can result in immediate dismissal from the program and failure to graduate. Completion of an annual disclosure statement is also required. Affirmative answers may result in dismissal from the program and failure to graduate. The disclosure statement may be viewed at http://psyphd.alaska.edu.