thirdtimecharmed Posted March 4, 2020 Posted March 4, 2020 Has anyone heard from Boston University's Clinical Psychology PhD program (POI: DP)? FingersCrossed34 1
yikespsych Posted March 4, 2020 Posted March 4, 2020 Anyone else waiting to hear back from Case Western?
Psyc2323 Posted March 4, 2020 Posted March 4, 2020 I asked a couple weeks ago, but does anyone have any info + has anyone heard back from Utah State University yet?
jujusr Posted March 4, 2020 Posted March 4, 2020 Spoke to the TC clinical department secretary. Supposedly all decisions have been made. Yep 1
AutumnCaffeine Posted March 4, 2020 Posted March 4, 2020 Has anyone who has received an offer from Suffolk gotten the outreach fellowship? Or is that something we find out about later on?
naddr Posted March 4, 2020 Posted March 4, 2020 Hello! I am considering deferring for a year to a program (OSU) that does not accept you under a specific advisor. Does anyone have any info about this process or has ever considered/discussed it? I fear that if I ask about it or reach out it could be looked at unfavorably by the faculty, so I'm testing the waters here. I'm guessing that if I do defer I wouldn't be able to participate in next year's application cycle, but also don't know if I'm ready to leave by the programs start date (first week of June). Thoughts? Help? Pls?
Ink-nut Posted March 4, 2020 Posted March 4, 2020 Does anyone know if the University of South Dakota has sent out all of the acceptances and wait list positions yet? I know some people were accepted last week but not sure if all of them are out yet.
justacigar Posted March 5, 2020 Posted March 5, 2020 19 hours ago, naddr said: Hello! I am considering deferring for a year to a program (OSU) that does not accept you under a specific advisor. Does anyone have any info about this process or has ever considered/discussed it? I fear that if I ask about it or reach out it could be looked at unfavorably by the faculty, so I'm testing the waters here. I'm guessing that if I do defer I wouldn't be able to participate in next year's application cycle, but also don't know if I'm ready to leave by the programs start date (first week of June). Thoughts? Help? Pls? As far as I know, deferring for PhD admissions is fairly rare, and not all programs allow it. Do you know for sure that would be an option?
andhowdoesthatmakeyoufeel Posted March 5, 2020 Posted March 5, 2020 Has anyone heard from CU Boulder post-interview?
absolutelynott Posted March 5, 2020 Posted March 5, 2020 Does anyone have any insight on how many people are put on the waitlist for John Jay's Clinical Psych PhD program? I'm currently on that list and wish I knew what my chances looked like.
psych2020 Posted March 5, 2020 Posted March 5, 2020 If the Denver poster sees this, do you mind DMing me your PI please? Congrats!!
Chugwater2020 Posted March 6, 2020 Posted March 6, 2020 45 minutes ago, psych2020 said: If the Denver poster sees this, do you mind DMing me your PI please? Congrats!! Me too, please!
Cascadia Posted March 7, 2020 Posted March 7, 2020 Has anyone received acceptance phone calls (not emails) over the weekend? Just trying to see if I should expect anything either today or tomorrow!
Crosswordese Posted March 7, 2020 Posted March 7, 2020 If the Southern Illinois University Carbondale clinical PhD poster sees this, could you DM me your POI? Congrats and thanks!
psycha Posted March 8, 2020 Posted March 8, 2020 On 3/5/2020 at 7:36 PM, Chugwater2020 said: Me too, please! Me three!
humanisticPOV Posted March 8, 2020 Posted March 8, 2020 (edited) On 3/3/2020 at 5:27 PM, ThirdWave said: Not sure if this is the right spot to post, but can anyone give me their opinions of counseling vs clinical programs (area of interest: childhood trauma and the intersection of forensic psych) and, if you know of either program, Carlow vs Chestnut Hill? Thanks bunches I've never heard of either of those programs, but your interest sounds more clinical to me (especially the forensic emphasis). There used to be better distinction between the two routes: "The field of clinical psychology was meant to address serious mental illness, such as any of the disorders that might be found in the DSM. In contrast, counseling psychology sometimes was referred to a field that addressed “normal people with normal problems,” often including vocational counseling." The distinction remains somewhat true but is more fuzzy now. My understanding is that clinical programs will have a heavier emphasis on research than counseling programs, and as far as outcomes, clinical people tend to work in academia and research positions more often, and counseling people are less likely to work with severe forms of mental illness when compared to clinical. I also understand there to be a heavier emphasis on multicultural competence in counseling programs when compared to clinical (though both programs are required incorporate diversity training by the APA). As a final comment, I can think of countless clinical psychologists who are involved in forensic work, but I don't know of any counseling psychologists in that area of the top of my head (though I'm sure they exist). You can read more about the distinctions in this guide: http://mitch.web.unc.edu/files/2017/02/MitchGradSchoolAdvice.pdf (this is where the quote from above came from) and on the APA's division of counseling psychology website https://www.div17.org/ Edited March 8, 2020 by humanisticPOV Add more info
yeeboi Posted March 9, 2020 Posted March 9, 2020 If anyone here went to ETSU's interview day and is willing to DM me, please do! Just trying to see who has gotten acceptances on this forum and who is waiting to hear back. I'm in the latter group but am still vaguely holding on hope for good news. Phil4192 1
Yep Posted March 9, 2020 Posted March 9, 2020 17 hours ago, humanisticPOV said: I've never heard of either of those programs, but your interest sounds more clinical to me (especially the forensic emphasis). There used to be better distinction between the two routes: "The field of clinical psychology was meant to address serious mental illness, such as any of the disorders that might be found in the DSM. In contrast, counseling psychology sometimes was referred to a field that addressed “normal people with normal problems,” often including vocational counseling." The distinction remains somewhat true but is more fuzzy now. My understanding is that clinical programs will have a heavier emphasis on research than counseling programs, and as far as outcomes, clinical people tend to work in academia and research positions more often, and counseling people are less likely to work with severe forms of mental illness when compared to clinical. I also understand there to be a heavier emphasis on multicultural competence in counseling programs when compared to clinical (though both programs are required incorporate diversity training by the APA). As a final comment, I can think of countless clinical psychologists who are involved in forensic work, but I don't know of any counseling psychologists in that area of the top of my head (though I'm sure they exist). You can read more about the distinctions in this guide: http://mitch.web.unc.edu/files/2017/02/MitchGradSchoolAdvice.pdf (this is where the quote from above came from) and on the APA's division of counseling psychology website https://www.div17.org/ While some of this stuff is somewhat true. The distinction between the two now is basically the cultural competence aspect and severity of disorders. Research production and ability to be in faculty position now is equal between both counseling and clinical psychology.
yikespsych Posted March 9, 2020 Posted March 9, 2020 If the person who is holding onto an offer from Texas Tech for PI: KC sees this, please DM me!!!
Jkid Posted March 9, 2020 Posted March 9, 2020 Just now, yikespsych said: If the person who is holding onto an offer from Texas Tech for PI: KC sees this, please DM me!!! Lol I feel this with the person holding for JC. STRESSING yikespsych 1
EHL343 Posted March 9, 2020 Posted March 9, 2020 To the poster accepted to LIU-Brooklyn - congrats!! Please DM me if you see this
Asdfghjkl123 Posted March 9, 2020 Posted March 9, 2020 If someone opts to hold their admission until April 15th, for whatever reason, what is the official policy for professor's extending offers to those on the waitlist? If you do get an offer ON April 15th, is it just that you essentially have until "midnight" to accept? Mainly curious if an offer can be extended after this deadline!
MyAmygdalaDoesn'tLikeThis Posted March 9, 2020 Posted March 9, 2020 To the poster who is on the wait list for Western Michigan University: Would you kindly message me with your POI? Please and thank you! And best of luck!
clinicalpsych.2022 Posted March 11, 2020 Posted March 11, 2020 (edited) Not sure if this is the right place to post this but-- I am currently waitlisted at one school and am trying to formulate a plan B if it doesn't lead to an acceptance. I am currently in two research labs at the university I graduated from but feel I have outgrown my positions there. I was in both for over two years and despite my asking several times was never granted permission to use data from these labs to create a thesis, author a paper, or submit a poster. These two labs are also not in my area of interest and I feel that I need to gain experience with the rare population I am interested in working with (psychosis and Sz). There aren't any labs in my state working with this population though so I am willing to move out of state to gain experience before applying to schools again next cycle. Would it be silly to start new somewhere this summer when I can only really commit 1 year (I know most labs ask for 2)? Would it make more sense to stay where I am and ask again with more assertion? I am worried that my lack of publications and experience working with my pop of interest has really hindered my chances this cycle and these are two things I would love to bump this year. If anyone can offer any words of wisdom or advice, it would be much appreciated.. Thank you so much! Edit: I have also been working as a psychometrist this past year Edited March 11, 2020 by clinicalpsych.2020
clinicalpsyhopeful Posted March 11, 2020 Posted March 11, 2020 12 hours ago, clinicalpsych.2020 said: Not sure if this is the right place to post this but-- I am currently waitlisted at one school and am trying to formulate a plan B if it doesn't lead to an acceptance. I am currently in two research labs at the university I graduated from but feel I have outgrown my positions there. I was in both for over two years and despite my asking several times was never granted permission to use data from these labs to create a thesis, author a paper, or submit a poster. These two labs are also not in my area of interest and I feel that I need to gain experience with the rare population I am interested in working with (psychosis and Sz). There aren't any labs in my state working with this population though so I am willing to move out of state to gain experience before applying to schools again next cycle. Would it be silly to start new somewhere this summer when I can only really commit 1 year (I know most labs ask for 2)? Would it make more sense to stay where I am and ask again with more assertion? I am worried that my lack of publications and experience working with my pop of interest has really hindered my chances this cycle and these are two things I would love to bump this year. If anyone can offer any words of wisdom or advice, it would be much appreciated.. Thank you so much! Edit: I have also been working as a psychometrist this past year Honestly I would exercise option 1, being in a lab for over two years and not being able to use data to even submit a poster is pretty unreasonable. Depending on your relationship with your current PI, I would be honest in letting them know your goals and how publishing papers/posters is very important this next year. If they don't offer to help you out, get out of there and try to find a lab that will help you meet your goals. Wishing you the best of luck and hoping you get into a school so you don't even have to worry about this! psychology2020a and clinicalpsych.2022 2
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