So, just what is the difference between a PhD and a PsyD? We asked Dr. Mark Carlson...
By Mandy Feeks
On Thursday, November 8th, Mark Carlson from Argosy University came at Gustavus to speak to Psychological Science students. Dr. Carlson earned his PhD in Clinical Psychology at Wayne State University in Detroit. He has worked in community mental health for over thirty years as a psychotherapist and consultant. In 2008, he joined the Argosy faculty. Prior to this, he supervised Adult Day Treatment, Adult Rehabilitative Mental Health Services and Supported Employment programs. He has a special interest in couples issues and co-occurring mental health and chemical health problems.
Many students eagerly arrived on this Thursday evening to learn more about the program of Clinical Psychology. Dr. Carlson specifically addressed the differences between a PhD, a PsyD and a Master’s degree. He shared the path that he took to arrive where he is now in his career and offered an insightful perspective into this specific field of Psychology. He also shared some of his personal experiences with clients and the rewards that come along with being a psychologist. Mark concluded by sharing a letter from a client that was especially moving.
This was an incredibly helpful opportunity for students who had questions about graduate school. The event was sponsored by Psi Chi and planned by officers Katelyn Warburton, Mandy Feeks, Emily Lindberg, Suzanna Massaro and supervisor Lauren Hecht. Psi Chi intends to plan additional events tailored to the Psychological Science major's needs. A possible future topic will be an opportunity to hear a presention by a marriage and family therapist as that was an area of interest expressed by majors.
We encourage Psychological Science majors to share their interests and suggestions for future speakers. This series of speakers throughout the year will offer students an opportunity to learn about the many fields of Psychology, further schooling options and potential future careers.
Please watch for reminders about the next speaker!
Psi Chi co-president
Mandy Feeks
[Amanda (Mandy) Feeks is a senior Psychological Science Honors major, Neuroscience minor, Psi Chi officer, departmental assistant, academic assistant and a member of the newsletter staff.]
Psych Science Majors in the News!
Not only are Psychological Science majors busy with classes, but they’re also involved in many other activities and events! October was an eventful month, with many Psychological Science Majors performing in various shows, concerts, and athletic events! November is also filled with musical concerts and athletic games.
In October, the Department of Theatre and Dance opened its 2012-2013 season with the contemporary dark comedy Behold the Coach, In a Blazer, Uninsured (and Other Good Intentions). The show opened on Thursday, October 25th and continued through the weekend. Emileah ZumBerge, a junior Psychological Science major and also a student assistant for the department, was involved with setting up the set for the show throughout the performance. Another October event in which Psychological Science Majors were involved was the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC) Championships for Cross Country. The meet was held at Como Golf Course on Saturday, October 27th. Members of the Men’s Cross Country team who are also Psychological Science Majors are Eric Jorgenson, Sam Fransen. The Women’s Cross Country team consists of two Psychological Science Majors: Nora Christensen and Erica Hett. The women’s team ran a great race at Conference and were crowned! Both the Men’s and Women’s teams competed at the NCAA Regional Championships on Saturday, November 10th at St. Olaf College. The Women’s team tied for fourth place & so they qualified for the Division III National Cross Country Championships in Terra Haute, Indiana, which was this past Saturday, November 17th!
Also in November, are many musical concerts involving several Psychological Science Majors. On Saturday, November 10th was the annual Gustavus Symphony Orchestra concert. Members of the Symphony Orchestra who are Psychological Science Majors include Emily Hinz, Ellie Frischmann, and Pepper Ennis who play horn, trombone, and violin, respectively. Saturday, November 17th was the date of the annual Gustavus Wind Orchestra and Vasa Wind Orchestra Fall Concert. Wind Orchestra members from the Psychological Science Department include Suzanna Massaro, who plays the clarinet and is also an officer of Psi Chi, Katelyn Warburton, who plays bass clarinet and is also the co-president of Psi Chi, and Emily Hinz, who plays horn. Psychological Science Majors in the Vasa Wind Orchestra include Paul Thao and Matt Erdahl, playing the tenor saxophone and euphonium, respectively. Looking forward to December, winter sports will be in full swing and the music department will have more concerts. So be sure to keep your eye on Gustavus News for future activities and events that Psychological Science Majors are involved in!
[Erica Hett is a senior Psychological Science major, Biology Major and Neuroscience minor. She is a member of the Women's Cross Country team, Nordic Ski team, a departmental assistant and a contributor to the on-line newsletter. She is currently considering options to pursue a degree in physical therapy.]
Moving for Bodies and Brains
You might study Psychological Science and Dance if you have a tennis ball for rolling out tight muscles and a squishy stress ball to calm anxieties in your backpack at any given time. Well, at least I (Emileah ZumBerge) do. But, I am not the only one here at Gustavus that is drawn to both the study of the beautiful brain and the art of dance. Several Psychological Science majors including Rebecca Stewart, Mallory Waytashek, Katherine Arndt, Marlee Lindberg, Mariah Welsh, and Suzanna Massaro all are participating in this production of Shared Space 2012, Connections In Space. We all began dancing at young ages and find meaning in movement. Welsh sums it up well with her statement, “Dancing keeps me sane.”
Shared Space is a dance concert performed, choreographed, and directed by entirely by students. The performances will be held in Kresge Studio on December 6 and 7, at 8:00 p.m. and Saturday, December 8, at 2:00 p.m.and 8:00 p.m..
Come, support your fellow Psychological Science majors and watch us perform in Connections In Space. We make connections with Psychological Science and Dance and our brains and our bodies, so we encourage you to come make some connections of your own.
[Emileah ZumBerge is a junior Psychological Science major and Dance minor. She is a Gustie Greeter, a departmental student assistant and a member of the on-line newsletter staff.]
Psych Science Major to intern at Mayo - January Interim 2013
My name is Pepper Ennis and I am a senior Pychological Science Honors major. I am looking forward to this J-Term because I will be doing an internship at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN assisting Thomas Bergquist, a neuropsychologist and Gustavus alumni. I have not received the specifics of what I will be doing during the month of January, but I do know that I will be shadowing Dr. Bergquist during his daily routine and assisting with his research. I am looking forward to this exciting opportunity!
Thomas F. Bergquist, Ph.D., ABPP is training coordinator for the fellowship Neuropsychology and Rehabilitation Psychology. He is Assistant Professor in Psychology in the Mayo Medical School. He is a consultant in both Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation and Psychiatry and Psychology at Mayo Clinic. Dr. Bergquist received his doctoral degree in Clinical and Medical Psychology from the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and completed a fellowship in Clinical Neuropsychology at Mayo Clinic. He is co-investigator of a NIDDR funded study on use of the Internet to deliver cognitive rehabilitation services to rural populations. His principal research interests include outcome following brain injury rehabilitation and coping with disability.
Gustie Psych Facebook Page...
Interested in reading interesting articles and timely posts from fellow psych majors? Of course you are!
http://www.facebook.com/groups/162325787137859/441589855878116/?notif_t=group_activity
Jean-Paul Noel '12 sends up update - from Switzerland!!
Hey Gusties!
I thought I would just check in and update you all on my life as a recent Gustie Graduate Psych Major. For those of you who didn’t know me, my name is Jean-Paul Noel and graduated last spring with a major in Psychology Honors and a minor in Neuroscience. Since, I’ve been living in Lausanne, Switzerland, where I work at the Cognitive Neuroscience Lab at the Swiss National Institute for Technology under the Fulbright Scholarship.
I must be honest; I browsed through old editions of Emil’s Epilogue in order to get a sense for what alumni typically have to say in their updates to the newsletter. Most of them give advice on grad school, which is great, but I am not in grad school, and therefore have no advice to give! Plus, not everyone wants to go to graduate school. Nonetheless, I guess I do have some tips and warnings about life after GAC in general…
First of all, I must say, transition after being on the hill isn’t easy. No other place after college you’ll feel so comfortable in an environment as you did at Gustavus. I feel like there were a lot of not-so-little things at GAC that I took for granted, and would very much enjoy now. For instance, how nice is it that it takes you 5 minutes to walk from your bed to the place were you sit at your 8am class? Now, in my case, this trajectory implies an hour of bus and metro. Also, how nice is it that the caf and library are open pretty much all day? No need to leave work early to rush to the supermarket!
Academic work after college changes as well. And this change is for the good, but must be appreciated as so (which isn’t exactly easy). At my job now I work with more electric engineers and computer scientists than I do with psychologists and neuroscientists. At first I think it’s natural to feel inadequate, as I did. As someone with a psychology background and coming from a small liberal arts school, NO OF COURSE I DON’T KNOW HOW TO PROGRAM PARALLEL PORTS IN BINARY CODE! However, you soon realize that everyone has their particular background, and you might not know a lot of what others take for granted, but you certainly have expertise in other areas. The beauty, and the challenge, of higher education is to put into context and synergy your capacities and skills with those of the people around you.
Anyway, enough of the abstract and more of the concrete! I am currently trying to juggle four different projects. Leading a project together with a Master student and a neurosurgeon student in Geneva looking at doing intracranial recording from the Intraparietal Sulcus and the Ventral Premotor Cortex as a measure of Peripersonal space, and another with a PhD student looking to correlate measures of Peripersonal space with the Full Body Illusion (similar to the Rubber Hand Illusion, but applied to the whole body). Additionally, I am working with a Post-Doc and another PhD student on a project related to ‘thought-insertion’ phenomena typically exhibited in schizophrenia, and finally collaborating with computer scientists on developing a sort of ‘episodic google’. Yes, I know, all this is very abstract and vague, but I thought I would share in case anyone is interested in talking a bit more about research!
Please feel free to email me (some of you have already!) (jeanpaulnc@gmail.com) if you want to talk about options for psych majors after GAC or about anything else really!
Keep warm,
Miss you all very much!
Eric Miller '08 reports that he is in the 5th year of the Graduate Program in Neuroscience Ph.D. program at the University of Minnesota and will graduate at the end of this summer. He is the first author of the linked article "Differential Modulation of Drug-Induced Structural and Functional Plasticity of Dendritic Spines".http://molpharm.aspetjournals.org/content/82/2/333.abstract
Click here for previous Alumni Updates
Faculty News/Presentations/Publications
Barbara Simpson (Psychological Science) chaired a Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association accreditation site visit, October 15-17 to Defiance College, Defiance Ohio.
Lauren Hecht (Psychological Science) has been appointed as the campus representative to the Midstates Consortium for Mathematics and Science (MCMS). Programs organized by the Consortium focus on improving undergraduate science and math education. These programs provide opportunities for our students to develop professional skills for presenting the results of their research at two annual symposia, one for life sciences and one for physical sciences and math. Faculty development opportunities include a summer workshop for new science and math faculty. Member schools include eleven undergraduate colleges, as well as Washington University and the University of Chicago. Lauren takes the reins from John Lammert (Biology). She will work closely with Gustavus faculty members and students, as well as Brandy Russell (Chemistry), the new national Director of the MCMS.
Kyle E. Chambers (Psychological Science) gave an invited talk "The Statistician with a Pacifier: What Babies Learn about Language & How it Changes Them" in the Institute for Child Development at the University of Minnesota.
Professional Opportunities
Upcoming Events:
- Fall 2012 Gustavus Psychological Science Research Symposium - Friday, December 7, 2012
- 27th National Conference on Undergraduate Research (NCUR) - April 11-13, 2013
University of Wisconsin-La Crosse - Be the first to email lsande@gustavus.edu for a $5 DQ certificate (sorry but departmental assistants are not eligible - and neither are profs...).