2019-2020 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Psychology
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Faculty
Chair
Anne Brodsky
A.B., Vassar College, 1987; M.A., 1992; Ph.D., University of Maryland, College Park, 1992;
Professors
Charissa Cheah
B.A., University of Waterloo (Canada), 1995; Ph.D., University of Maryland, College Park, 2000
Lynnda Dahlquist
B.A., St. Olaf College, 1975; M.S., Purdue University, 1978; Ph.D., 1981
Kenneth I. Maton
B.A., Yale University, 1975; M.A., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1982; Ph.D., 1984
Christopher Murphy
B.A., University of New Hampshire, 1983; M.A., 1990; Ph.D., State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1991
Bernard M. Rabin
B.A., University of Michigan, 1963; Ph.D., State University of New York at Buffalo, 1968
Jason Schiffman
B.A., Emory University, 1996; Ph.D., University of Southern California, 2003
Susan Sonnenschein
B.A., New York University, 1972; M.S., The Pennsylvania State University, 1975; Ph.D., State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1979
Shari Waldstein
A.B., Duke University, 1984; M.S., University of Pittsburgh, 1989; Ph.D., 1993
Associate Professors
Shawn Bediako
B.S., University of Central Arkansas, 1994; M.S., Florida A&M University, 1996; Ph.D., State University of New York at Stony Brook, 2002
John Borrero
B.S., Lousiana State University, 1997; M.S., University of Florida, 2001; Ph.D., 2004
Nicole Else-Quest
B.A., University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1999; M.S., 2002; Ph.D., 2006
Steven C. Pitts
B.A., California State University, North Ridge, 1990; M.A., Arizona State University, 1993; Ph.D., 1999
David Schultz
B.A., University of Maryland, College Park, 1990; M.Div., Yale University, 1993; M.A., The College of William & Mary, 1995; Ph.D., University of Delaware, 2000
Shuyan Sun
B.A., Beijing Normal University, 2004; M.A., University of Cincinnati, 2008; Ph.D., 2012
Assistant Professors
Jasmine Abrams
B.A., Virginia State University, 2010; M.S., Virginia Commonwealth University, 2012; Ph.D., Virginia Commonwealth University, 2015
Danielle L. Beatty
B.A., North Carolina State University, 2000; M.A., North Carolina Central University, 2002; Ph.D., City University of New York, 2007
Erika Fountain
B.A., Florida Internation University, 2010; M.A., 2015; Ph.D., Georgetown University 2017
Bronwyn Hunter
B.S. Southern Connecticut State University, 2007; M.A., DePaul University, 2010; Ph. D., 2013
Tasneem Khambaty
B.S., Ohio State University, 2009; M.S., Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, 2012; Ph.D., 2015
Nkiru Nnawulezi
B.A., American University, 2008; M.A. 2011; Ph.D., 2015, Michigan State University
Raimi Quiton
B.S. Stanford University, 1989; Ph.D., University of Maryland, Baltimore, 2007
Professor of the Practice
Elliot D. Lasson
B.A., University of Maryland Baltimore County, 1987; M.A., 1990; Ph.D., Wayne State University, 1992
Clinical Professor
Greg Williams
B.A. 1978, M.S., 1980, State of University of New York at Plattsburg; Ed.D. 1997, George Washington University
Senior Lecturers
Diane Lindwarm Alonso
B.S., University of Maryland, College Park, 1985; M.S., 1995; Ph.D., 1998
Julie Murphy
B.A., (English) , University of Maryland, College Park, 1991; B.A. (Psychology) 1995; M.A., University of Cincinnati, 1999; Ph.D., 2004
Eileen O’Brien
B.S., University of Pittsburgh, 1973; M.S., The Catholic University of America, 1977; M.A., 1984; Ph.D., 1987
Lecturers
Elissa Abod
B.A., The Pennsylvania State University, 1987; M.A., Fairleigh Dickinson University, 1989; Ph. D., George Mason University, 2001.
Robert Anderson
B.S., 1976; M.A. 1979 Towson University; Ph.D. University of Maryland 1993; Post-doc University of Maryland School of Medicine, 1993-94.
Donald Knight
B.A., University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 1997; M.A., New York University, 1999; Ph.D., Western Michigan University, 2012
Laura Rose
B.A., Ithaca College, 2006; M.A., Boston College, 2008; Ph.D., University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 2014
Karen Watkins-Lewis
B.S., Howard University, 1986; M.S., 1998, Ph.D., 2007
Adjunct Professors
Maureen Black
B.A., The Pennsylvania State University, 1967; M.A., University of Southern California, 1973; Ph.D., Emory University, 1978
Marc Bornstein
B.A., Columbia College, M.S., Ph.D., Yale University
Michael Cataldo
B.A., University of Rochester, 1968; M.A., University of Kansas, 1971; Ph.D., 1974
David Chavis
B.A. 1978, M.S., 1981, Ph.D., 1983, Vanderbilt University
Geoffrey Schoenbaum
B.S., University of Georgia, 1989; Ph.D., The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1994; M.D., 1996
John Sollers, III
B.S., Towson State University, 1990; M.A., 1995; Ph.D., University of Missouri-Columbia, 1997
Alan B. Zonderman
B.S. University of Massachusetts, 1973; M.S. University of Colorado, 1974; Ph.D., University of Colorado, 1977
Adjunct Associate Professors
Susan E. Bachus
B.A. University of Michigan, 1977; Ph.D. University of Michigan, 1987
Louis Hagopian
B.S., Virginia Commonwealth University, 1985; M.S., Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1988; Ph.D., 1991
Brenda Hussey-Gardner
B.S., University of Maryland, College Park, 1985; M.A., M.P.H., The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1987; Ph.D., University of Maryland, College Park, 1995
Leslie Katzel
B.S., Cooper Union, 1975; Ph.D., The Johns Hopkins University, 1981; M.D., University of Maryland School of Medicine, 1984
Gloria Reeves
B.S., University of Maryland at College Park, 1993; MD, University of Maryland at Baltimore, 1997
Laura Rowland
Ph.D. University of New Mexico
Sharon Hoover Stephan
B.A. University of Sussex, 1995; M.A. University of Maryland Baltimore County, 2000; Ph.D. University of Maryland Baltimore County, 2002
Cindy Schaefer
B.S., University of Maryland, College Park, 1992; M.A.,1996; Ph.D., University of Missouri-Columbia, 2000
Keith Slifer
B.A. McDaniel College, M.A., University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Ph.D. Florida State
Vicki Tepper
B.A., Douglass College ,Rutgers University, 1979; M.S., 1982; Ph.D., George Peabody College of Vanderbilt University, 1989
Jennifer Zarcone
Ph.D., University of Florida
Adjunct Assistant Professors
Carrie S. W. Borrero
B.S., University of Pittsburgh, 1995; M.S., Vilanova University, 1999; Ph.D., University of Florida, 2006
Nicole Hausman
B.A., University of Florida, 2004; M.A., University of Maryland Baltimore County, 2007; Ph.D. University of Maryland Baltimore County, 2012
Lisa Jordan
B.S., Elmira College, 1989; M.A.,1993; Ph.D., Michigan State University, 1997
Patricia Kurtz
B.A., The George Washington University, 1984; M.A., The Claremont Graduate School, 1988; Ph.D., 1991
Fernanda Tebexreni Orsati
B.A., Mackenzie University, 2004; M.A., Mackenzie University, 2006; Ph.D., Syracuse University, 2013
Cara Phillips
M.A., Ph.D., University of Florida
Peter Resta
B.S., Mount St. Mary’s University, 1970; M.A., Loyola College in Maryland, 1976; M.S.W., University of Maryland, Baltimore, 1984; Ph.D., University of Maryland, College Park, 1993
Ashlyn L. Smith
B.A., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1998; M.A.; Georgia State University, 2007; Ph.D., Georgia State University, 2001
Carrington Wendell
B.A., Wake Forest; M.A., Ph.D., 2011 University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Cheryl Zwart
B.A., State University of New York at Binghamton, 1971; M.A., 1978; Ph.D., 1981
Affiliate Associate Professors
John Martello
B.S., The Pennsylvania State University, 1974; M.A., University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 1976; Ph.D., Howard University, 1984
Laura Ting
A.B. 1987; M.S., Columbia University, 1989, Ph.D.,2003 University of Maryland, Graduate School of Social Work
Affiliate Professor
Zane Berge
Ph.D., 1988 Michigan State University
Emeritus Professors
Linda Baker
B.A., Douglass College, 1973; M.S., 1975; Ph.D., Rutgers University, 1977
Thomas Blass
B.A., Yeshiva College, 1963; M.A., 1965; Ph.D., 1969
A. Charles Catania
A.B., Columbia University, 1957; M.A., 1958; Ph.D., Harvard University, 1961
Marilyn E. Demorest
B.A., Trinity College, 1965; M.A., The Johns Hopkins University, 1967; Ph.D., 1969
Carlo DiClemente
A.B., St. Mary’s University, 1964; S.T.B., Gregorian University, Rome (Italy), 1966; M.A., New School of Social Research, 1974; Ph.D., University of Rhode Island, 1978
Stanley Feldstein
B.A., Brooklyn College, 1953; M.A., Columbia University, 1954; Ph.D., 1960
Jonathan C. Finkelstein
B.A., Temple University, 1965; Ph.D., The University of Chicago, 1971
Robert R. Provine
B.S., Oklahoma State University, 1965; Ph.D., Washington University, 1971
Emeritus Associate Professor
Robert Deluty
B.A., New York University, 1975; M.A., State University of New York at Buffalo, 1978; Ph.D., 1980
Mary Ann Metzger
B.A., University of Connecticut, 1960; M.A., 1968; Ph.D., 1970
Emeritus Faculty
Karen Freiberg
B.S., State University of New York at Plattsburgh, 1966; M.A., Cornell University, 1968; Ph.D., Syracuse University, 1974
Courses in this program are listed under PSYC.
UMBC’s Department of Psychology provides an exceptional opportunity for students to see how basic laboratory research can be translated into treatments, interventions and policies that improve the quality of life. Interested undergraduates work with internationally recognized researchers at the cutting edge of science. In recent years, students have participated in studies of such issues as the neurological basis of laughter and yawning, how rats and people regulate eating, how infants ‘bond’ with their parents, how nonhuman species learn complex tasks, the relations between behavior and heart disease and what society can do to foster the social and academic success of disadvantaged youth. Psychology is an exciting discipline; at UMBC, undergraduates can share in that excitement.
Career and Academic Paths
The psychology major provides a firm foundation for students interested in graduate study and a range of careers and professions. Positions held by program graduates include clinical psychologist, counseling psychologist, school psychologist, industrial psychologist, research consultant, personnel administrator, university professor, social worker, lawyer, physician, dentist, optometrist and early-education or elementary school teacher. Each year, many of UMBC’s graduating seniors go on directly to graduate programs in psychology (M.A., Ph.D. and Psy.D.) and in related fields such as social work (M.S.W.). Many are admitted to some of the most highly rated programs in the United States. Students interested in pursuing graduate study should consult with their academic advisor upon declaring their major. UMBC offers doctoral programs in applied developmental psychology and human-services psychology, including behavioral medicine, clinical psychology and community-applied social psychology.
Academic Advising
All new freshmen, transfers and recently declared majors should meet with the department’s academic advisor, Ms. Debbie Paul (410-455-2366, dpaul@umbc.edu, MP Main Office, 312 B) to be provided with advising clearance prior to course registration during their first semester in the major. Ms. Paul will also assist students with a psychology minor and those students who may be considering psychology as a major. During this initial meeting, Ms. Paul can assist with questions about university requirements (such as academic policies, registration concerns and General Education Program requirements), academic support, transfer concerns, research opportunities and career options. Each student is then assigned a faculty advisor after his or her first semester as a psychology major and remains with that faculty advisor until graduation. To determine who your faculty advisor is, simply visit MyUMBC and click on the Advising and Student Support tab. Once there, click on MyAdvisor. Students may email their advisors directly from that page to set up their appointments. Students who are being transitioned from Ms. Paul to a faculty advisor are assigned to their new faculty advisors after the add/drop period is complete during the second semester in their major. The departmental advising process is designed to give each student individual attention and guidance about curricular choices. All students must meet with an advisor at least once per semester, to discuss their course selection for the upcoming semester and be cleared to register. Advising appointments can be made by email. Please arrive on time with a transcript and any other relevant paperwork.
Honors Program
The departmental honors program is open to qualified students who wish to pursue advanced independent research in psychology. Students interested in going to graduate school in psychology are particularly encouraged to become honors candidates because research experience is given considerable weight by admissions committees. Students who complete the honors sequence of courses (PSYC 498 and PSYC 499) and have a GPA in psychology of 3.5 or above are eligible to receive the B.A. or B.S. degree with departmental honors.
The Universities at Shady Grove
The UMBC psychology department is represented at the Universities at Shady Grove, (USG) an off-site location in Montgomery County that is home to 9 of the 11 institutions from the University System of Maryland (USM). The UMBC Psychology Program at USG is intended to provide junior- and senior-level classes to students who have transferred to the program from either a two-year or four-year institution. The program is equivalent in course material and content to the program at the home campus, and all psychology students, upon graduation, receive a B.A. in Psychology from UMBC. For more information about the program at the Universities at Shady Grove, see the UMBC@USG Web site at www.umbc.edu/shadygrove.
Graduate Courses
Some graduate courses in applied developmental and human services psychology are open to qualified undergraduates under the conditions specified in the academic regulations chapter of this catalog. Complete course descriptions may be found in the Graduate Catalog.
Special Opportunities
There are a variety of opportunities for undergraduates to gain applied and research experience. Students regularly obtain internships and co-op education experiences through the department and UMBC’s Shriver Center. Similarly, a large number of students secure hands-on research experience by collaborating with psychology faculty members. Many undergraduate researchers have had the opportunity to co-author publications and present professional conference papers. A listing of faculty research programs and opportunities for student involvement can be found on the Department website (www.umbc.edu/psyc) and posted in the Psychology department (opposite Room 321). Interested students should contact the faculty member directly to inquire what research involvement opportunities are currently available.
Student Organizations
The department sponsors Psi Chi, the national honorary society for psychology. Psi Chi meets regularly and discusses such issues as graduate school preparation, job and internship resources, research opportunities and student-faculty relationships. Psi Chi membership criteria include completion of at least three semesters and a minimum of nine semester hours of psychology courses, declaration of the major or minor in psychology, a cumulative GPA above 3.0 and a psychology course GPA above 3.25. For additional information, contact our Psi Chi Advisors, Dr. Chris Murphy (410-455-2367, chmurphy@umbc.edu, MP 321) or Dr. Laura Rose (410-455-3228, laurose@umbc.edu, MP 320). Visit us at our website at: http://www.umbc.edu/studentlife/orgs/psichi/Welcome.html
ProgramsBachelor of Arts- Psychology, B.A.
- Psychology, Biopsychology Concentration, B.A.
- Psychology, Developmental Psychology Concentration, B.A.
- Psychology, Diversity, Inclusion, and Multicultural Psychology Concentration
- Psychology, Human Services Psychology Concentration, B.A.
Bachelor of ScienceCertificateNon-DegreeCoursesPsychology
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