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NEWS
INDEX
2002
2003
September
Clinical-community
psychology doctoral program honored
Jeff
Unger, News Bureau
217-333-1085; junger@uiuc.edu
9/2/03
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
The doctoral program in clinical-community psychology at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign has been honored for its record of creating
and sustaining effective programs for recruiting, retaining and training
ethnic minority students.
The American Psychological Association Suinn Minority Achievement Award
was presented Aug. 7 during the 111th annual APA meeting in Toronto.
Sumie Okazaki, a psychology professor and program representative, accepted
the award. The award also was presented to the doctoral program in social
psychology at the University of Michigan and the doctoral program in
community psychology at New York University.
The clinical-community
psychology program at Illinois includes a weekly diversity seminar
during which students and faculty discuss a variety of diversity- and
social justice-related issues and how they affect the participants’
roles as teachers, students, researchers and service providers.
Students are exposed to diversity issues beginning in the first year
of study in the program at Illinois. The required introductory course
sequence includes extensive coverage of topics related to ethnic minority
mental health and communities of color. Students work with diverse members
of the community in public schools and neighborhood organizations.
Many students and faculty members are collaborating on research involving
women and ethnic minorities, such as the role of culture and ethnicity
in emotion, personality and psychopathology; and experiences of Latino
family caregivers.
The current program enrollment consists of 41 percent ethnic minority
students; the incoming fall class includes 80 percent ethnic minority
students. The retention rate for minority students in the past five
years has been 83 percent.
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