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Community Psychology: Past and Present

This presentation at NITOP provides an overview of community psychology, its origins, current themes, and its relationship to other fields. It also includes teaching resources and examples of current research.

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Community Psychology: Past and Present

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  1. Community Psychology: Past and Present Marybeth Shinn Vanderbilt University Presentation at National Institute on Teaching of Psychology (NITOP), January, 2012

  2. Audiences • Teachers who want to incorporate a class session on community psychology into their courses • Advisors of students who want to make a difference, and aren’t sure how to prepare themselves

  3. Outline • Overview of community psychology • Origins • Current themes • For teachers • Community psychology in relationship to your fields • Current research examples • For advisors • Overview of graduate training • Council of Education Programs powerpoint oneducational options and careers

  4. Origins • Clinical psychology: focus on welfare, but not just one individual at a time • Public health: focus on prevention, populations • Social psychology (Lewin): action research; reversing the fundamental attribution error • Developmental psychology (Bronfenbrenner): levels of context from microsystem to macrosystem

  5. Initial Themes • Contexts of human welfare • Synergy of research and action • Social justice

  6. Additional Current Themes • Positive change, health, and empowerment at individual and systemic levels • Collaborative relationships with communities, groups, organizations in directing change • Multidisciplinary approach

  7. Teaching community psychology • Introductory exercise (for any class) • Research exemplars relevant to • Social psychology • Developmental psychology • Clinical/abnormal psychology • Materials in packet include teaching resources and a lecture outline by Jean Hill (particularly suitable for intro or health psychology) • Resources for service learning courses are at: http://www.scra27.org/resources/educationc/teachingcp/communitys

  8. Introductory Teaching Exercise: Origins of Homelessness Why do some people become homeless? Why do so many people become homeless? • Alcohol, drugs • Mental illness • Job loss • Underwater on mortgage • Laziness • Bad luck • Poverty, inequality • Recession • Foreclosure crisis • Unemployment rates

  9. Social psychology: Achievement Gap • Social Psychologists study stereotype threat, implicit theories of intelligence, etc. • Community psychologist Kenneth Maton in collaboration with university president Freeman Hrabowski closed the gap in STEM disciplines at UMBC • African American students have GPAs comparable to Caucasian and Asian students • A third of African American graduates are in STEM majors • University is major contributor of African American students to science Ph.D. programs

  10. UMBC Meyerhoff Program (Maton) Transformation of Culture Theory of Empowering Settings • Financial Aid • Summer bridge program • Study groups • Program values • Program community • Personal advising, counseling • Tutoring • Multiple research experiences • Faculty, administrative, family involvement • Mentors • Community service • Group-based belief system • Core activities • Relational environment • Opportunity role structure • Leadership • Setting maintenance and change

  11. Developmental Psychology: Positive Youth Development • Developmental psychologists study settings that foster positive youth development • In his book, Immigrants raising citizens, community psychologist Hirokazu Yoshikawa followed a birth cohort of 380 infants of African American, Chinese, Dominican, and Mexican families through age 3: • Surveys of parents • Direct assessment of children • Ethnographic interviews with a subset of families

  12. Immigrants Raising Citizens (Yoshikawa) • Children of undocumented parents showed delayed: • Early language development • Motor development • Perceptual skills • Mediators • 24 months: Economic hardship, parental distress • 36 months: Parental work conditions, low use of center-based child care

  13. Abnormal/Clinical: Functional Impairment • Clinical psychologists study functional impairment and how to overcome it. • Community psychologist Sam Tsemberis created a Housing First program for individuals with serious mental illnesses and long histories of homelessness: • Individuals on the street are given apartments with private landlords, without preconditions • Wrap-around services are available but under tenant control

  14. Pathways Housing First (Tsemberis) • In randomized trial (Tsemberis, Gulcur, Shinn, others) comparing housing first to the “staircase model” housing first participants: • Had 99 fewer days homeless in first year • Did not differ in substance abuse • Data were consistent with control programs sorting rather than changing people • Cost less, due to lower levels of hospitalization • Got housed faster and stayed indoors longer

  15. Summary for Teaching • Community psychologists use research and theory to empower individuals and create positive social change • Community psychologists focus on social contexts, including policy contexts, that promote (or inhibit) positive outcomes for individuals • Many more resources at http://www.scra27.org/education

  16. Advising Students: Education Programs at http://www.scra27.org/education • 44 Ph.D. Programs • 17 Community Psychology • 15 Clinical/Community Psychology • 12 Interdisciplinary programs • 27 Masters programs • 19 Community Psychology • 3 Community-counseling/clinical • 5 Interdisciplinary/prevention

  17. Advising Students • www.SCRA27.org website has many more resources, including: • Idealist.org article by Sharon Hakim, which is in your meeting materials • Power point by Council of Education Programs (also shown at NITOP meeting) • See also the Community Tool Box: http://ctb.ku.edu/en/default.aspx • Marvelous free resource with over 7,000 pages of practical guidance in creating community change

  18. References • For age structure of homelessness (citation for calculation, no graph): • Shinn, M. (2010). Homelessness, poverty, and social exclusion in the United States and Europe. European Journal of Homelessness, 4, 19-44.http://eohw.horus.be/files/freshstart/European%20Journal%20of%20Homelessness/Volume%20Four/article-1.pdf • For Maton empowerment and UMBC story • Maton, K. I. (2008). Empowering community settings: Agents of individual development, community betterment, and positive social change. American Journal of Community Psychology, 41, 4-21. • Maton, K. L., Hrabowski, F.A., Özdemir, M., & Wimms, H. (2008). Enhancing representation, retention, and achievement of minority students in higher education: A social transformation theory of change. In M. Shinn & H. Yoshikawa (Eds.). Toward positive youth development: Transforming schools and community programs (pp. 115-132). New York: Oxford University Press. • For Yoshikawa study of immigrant groups: • Yoshikawa, H. (2012) Immigrants raising citizens: Undocumented parents and their young children. New York: Russell Sage Foundation. • For Housing First study results • Gulcur, L., Stefancic, A., Shinn, M., Tsemberis, S., & Fischer, S.N. (2003). Housing, hospitalization and cost outcomes for homeless individuals with psychiatric disabilities participating in Continuum of Care and Housing First programmes. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 13,171-186. • Tsemberis, S., Gulcur, L. & Nakae, M. (2004). Housing first, consumer choice, and harm reduction for homeless individuals with a dual diagnosis. American Journal of Public Health, 94 (4), 651-656. • Tsemberis, S., Moran, L.L., Shinn, M., Asmussen, S. M., & Shern, D. L. (2003). Consumer preference programs for homeless individuals with psychiatric disabilities: A drop-in center and a supported housing program. American Journal of Community Psychology, 32, 305-317.

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