January 2002
Volume 15, Number 1
Department Profile
Brooklyn College
|
| Undergraduate Program |
|---|
The Department also sponsors a successful Psi Chi chapter, an active undergraduate Psychology Club with its own colloquium series, and an academic mentoring/counseling program.
| Masters Program |
|---|
Graduates of the Experimental program tend to move into careers in pure or applied research or to continue with their education in doctoral programs. Graduates of the I/O programs typically have careers in applied settings in human resources and human relations, management consulting, and organizational development, typically starting with entry-level executive positions. A significant number also go on to further graduate training.
| Doctoral Program |
|---|
The Department's overall philosophy is to focus on experimental and theoretical approaches to psychology, considered broadly. First-level courses, usually taught as small lecture sections, cover basic areas. Advanced courses, usually in the form of seminars, focus on special topics in current research areas. Most are taken here at Brooklyn College, others elsewhere in the other nine subprograms and the facilities of the nearby Health Science Center of the State University of New York (Downstate Medical School). Each student's program is individually tailored to his or her interests and career goals.
The program stresses research experience. Students conduct research under the supervision of faculty advisors throughout their graduate careers. Besides acquiring skills specific to their research interests, students are also strongly encouraged to become familiar with sophisticated computer, mathematical, and statistical techniques relevant to a wide range of research problems.
Teaching experience is also encouraged. Students' financial support typically involves teaching undergraduate courses under the supervision of the faculty. The program includes a seminar on teaching and focuses attention on the professional possibilities and demands in settings both inside and outside of the university. These activities have lead to a high rate of professional success for our graduates. A survey of our recent doctorates reveals that in the last 10 years, of the 25 doctoral degrees we conferred, 100 percent are employed in jobs related to their doctoral training: six hold tenured professorships in college and universities; six are on tenure-track lines; two hold postdoctoral fellowships; four hold research associate positions, and six work in various areas of applied psychology.
The demands of research, course work, and teaching ordinarily require that the program be restricted to full-time students. To facilitate the education of our doctoral students, the program has traditionally provided financial support to all who are admitted.
| Department and Graduate Program Faculty |
|---|
|
Israel Abramov Karen Ackroff Benzion Chanowitz Andrew Delamater Matthew Erdelyi Jerri Frantzve Frank Grasso Louise Hainline Dorathea Halpert Glen Hass Daniel Kurylo Ching-Tse Lee Stephen Lepore Donald Levine |
Neil Macmillan Laraine McDonough Ian McMahan Barton Meyers Eli Osman David Owen Arthur Reber Nancy Romer Allan Sapolsky Anthony Sclafani Alvin Snadowsky Sheldon Solomon Peter Weston |
| Affiliated Faculty |
|---|
|
Patricia Brooks David O'Brien Kevin Sailor Theodore Raphan |
Martin Ruck Hollis Scarborough Richard Wiener |
| Contact |
|---|
|
General issues R Glen Hass Department of Psychology Brooklyn College of CUNY Brooklyn, NY 11210 (718) 951-5601 ghass@brooklyn.cuny.edu |
Masters Programs Benzion Chanowitz Department of Psychology Brooklyn College of CUNY Brooklyn, NY 11210 (718) 951-5109 benzionc@brooklyn.cuny.edu |
Doctoral Program Arthur S. Reber Department of Psychology Brooklyn College of CUNY Brooklyn, NY 11210 (718) 951-5975 areber@brooklyn.cuny.edu |
| www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/psych |
|---|



