summer 2011
Clinical &psychology school y Inside
Help and Hope, p. 2 Program Faculty p. 2 Alumni Features, p. 3 Class Notes, p. 4
In 2011, the Curry School of Education was ranked 22nd among graduate schools of education by U.S. News & World Report. Six program areas were ranked in the top 15: • Special Education • Secondary Education • Educational Policy • Elementary Education • Administration & Supervision • Curriculum & Instruction
The Curry Alumni Portal Get more news about fellow alumni and upcoming events: curry.virginia.edu/alumni
Editor: Ron Reeve, Director Clinical and School Psychology Program Clinical & School Psychology is published by the Curry School of Education and is sponsored by the Curry School of Education Foundation, P.O. Box 400276, Charlottesville, VA 22904 http://curry.virginia.edu/clinpsychnewsletter
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Curry in the Rankings
/// The driving simulator.
Virtual Driving
Studying teen drivers with autism.
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riving a car is an important step toward independence for adolescents and young adults, but there are no legal restrictions on driving with autism spectrum disorder. “The symptoms of Asperger’s and high-functioning autism make learning to drive particularly challenging for individuals with this disorder,” said Ron Reeve, director of the Curry School Clinical and School Psychology program. Reeve is co-investigator with Daniel Cox, professor of behavioral medicine in the School of Medicine, on a new study funded with a $100,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense. The grant will allow them to examine whether virtual reality driving simulators can be used effectively to train and evaluate the driving skills of teens with Asperger’s and HFA. “For example, they may hyper-focus on one aspect of driving,” Reeve said, “and struggle with the multitasking required to simultaneously keep the car in the correct lane, maintain an appropriate distance from the car ahead, attend to a changing stoplight or other signal.” The benefits of using the virtual reality driving simulator are multi-fold. The simulator offers safe exposure to challenging defensive driving demands. It also can play back and rehearse challenging maneuvers without the potential human element of getting frightened or
“The symptoms of Asperger’s and highfunctioning autism make learning to drive particularly challenging ”
—continued on page 2
clinical & school psychology • summer 2011
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Ron Reeve is currently director of the program. His research and clinical interests are now focused primarily on autism spectrum disorders. Ann Loper has particular interest in the social and familial adjustment of correctional populations, including helping incarcerated parents make healthy connections with their children. Peter Sheras is the chair of the Curry School’s Department of Human Services. He works in bullying prevention and intervention, in crisis intervention, and in couple and family relationship issues. Winx Lawrence has developed a mentoring program that pairs adolescent girls with college women, the Young Women Leaders Program. She also works with the Family Empowerment Project, supporting multi-problem families. Antoinette Thomas splits time between our program and the counselor education program. She has particular expertise in diversity issues, school consultation, and psychotherapy with children and adolescents. Lisa Locke-Downer works with children and young adults using a cognitive-behavioral framework, focusing on anxiety, depression, and behavioral concerns. She was director of the Center for Clinical Psychology Services before reducing her role to half time in order to cope with her one-year-old triplets. Patrick Tolan is our newest core faculty member. He came to the Curry School to direct YouthNex, The U.Va. Center to Promote Effective Youth Development. Previously he was director of the Institute for Juvenile Research in Chicago. He is a national leader in prevention and intervention research with adolescents. For information about Youth-Nex, visit curry.virginia. edu/youth-nex
Help & Hope
Student oversees ongoing services for Roma children
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he was 17 when she first met the Roma children living in a dank orphanage, neglected and abused. Their dark eyes and vacant stares broke Clare Vierbuchen’s heart, and she couldn’t forget what she saw on that high school community service trip. Now more than a decade later, the children are the first thing on her mind every morning when she wakes up. More often than not, the morning finds her on the phone with several of them, checking to make sure they are safe and keeping up with their schoolwork before she, herself, heads to school. Vierbuchen is a doctoral student in the clinical psychology program at the Curry School. At the same time, however, she runs both a group home and an after-school community center for children in the northern Romania town of Bistrita. While she was a junior at Princeton University, she and some friends set up a nonprofit organization called Open Doors Romania. With the money she raised, she opened a group home called House of Hope. She rescued five children from the state orphanage, hired carefully selected foster parents to care for them, and gave them a chance for a normal life. Still not satisfied, she then opened a community center where children could spend time after school, eat a nutritious meal, get clean clothes and school supplies, take showers and get help with their homework. “The Roma people are viewed as a waste of time over there,” Vierbuchen said. “I don’t
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Core Faculty of the C&SP Program
/// Clare Vierbuchen
know how many people have told me that I’m wasting my time.” She knows better, though. She says her center helps kids get somewhere in life, so they don’t repeat the cycle of neglect and abandonment. After Princeton she spent two years in Romania, then returned stateside to earn her master’s degree at the Curry School, where she found the clinical psychology program she was looking for – one with a children-and-families focus and ample opportunities for hands-on experience. “The program has given me a new way of thinking about these kids and a better way of helping them,” she explained. Now in Curry’s doctoral program, she says
the children are never far from her thoughts. She makes the 12-hour flight to Romania every chance she gets – summer break, Thanksgiving, winter break and again over spring break. “The kids are so great, so impressive,” she said. “I love working with them.”
Driving Study continued from page 1 frustrated with the driving performance of HFA trainees. Over the summer, the study has included 20 HFA teenagers, each with a learner’s permit. Half the teens are receiving virtual reality driving simulator training. Once the participants have reviewed specific driving maneuvers, they will be applied in progressively more demanding virtual traffic and road conditions. The other half of the study group will receive
whatever training they would normally receive. For example, these teens will potentially receive on-the-road training with parents and driver’s education instructors or even professional driver’s training. Both study groups will be evaluated afterward by qualified, independent driving evaluators who will not know who did and did not receive the virtual reality training. The study expects to report its findings by the summer of 2012.
Read more about these stories and others at curry.virginia.edu/clinpsychnewsletter 2
SUMMER 2 0 1 1 • CLINICAL & SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY
Read more about each of these alumni at curry.virginia.edu/clinpsychnewsletter
Peg Dawson
A True Leader in the Profession
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eg Dawson has enjoyed a long and
distinguished career since earning her doctor of education degree from the Curry School in 1978. Her career has been characterized by a successful practice as a school psychologist in both public and private settings but also by years of professional leadership at the state, national, and international levels. Dawson helped found the New Hampshire Association of School Psychologists in 1983 and was its second president. She is also a past president of both the National Association of School Psychologists and the International School Psychology Association, and she has edited the NASP newsletter, Communiqué. Her path to leadership started with her preparation at Curry, where she was able to combine work in the areas of psychology and learning disabilities for a dissertation based on multidisciplinary research. Professor Dick Abidin, she says, was a role model in leadership. Then she credits serendipity. A colleague asked her to run as a New Hampshire delegate to the NASP, and she won—most likely, she says, because of her name recognition with the state association. “Once I became involved at the national level, it became irresistible,” she says. The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (P.L. 94-142) had been passed in 1975. “The field was really changing and grappling with the changes,” she remembers. “I had ideas about that. When you have ideas, you speak up, and when you speak up, you are asked to hold higher office.” Thinking about how the field could grow and change propelled her to leadership, she believes. When the ISPA presented its Distinguished Service Award to her last year, her colleague Peter Whelley noted, “Peg is current in her clinical practice and scholarly publications while at the same time having a vision for the future. She is aware of the times in which we live and also can envision the time to come. These are hallmarks of a true leader.” While she considers herself nowhere near the end of her career, Dawson is finally ready to step back from some of the demands of leadership and reduce the number of “irons in the
/// Margaret M. “Peg” Dawson M.Ed. ‘74, Ed.D. ‘78
fire,” she says. “I like my work, but I would like more time on weekends for myself.” For those just beginning their careers, Dawson has this advice, “I didn’t always have the best jobs. Sometimes I moved for personal rather than professional reasons. But no matter how unfulfilling a particular job was, I tried to find some aspect that would give me satisfaction, maybe learning something new or pairing with a coworker doing interesting work. The perfect job doesn’t exist. Pick one thing you want to get better at. Do it in a little way. You never know where it is going to lead you.”
Peg Dawson’s Career at a Glance Professional Experience • 16 years as a school psychologist in Maine and New Hampshire • 19 years in private practice at the Center for Learning and Attention Disorders in Portsmouth, N.H. Areas of expertise: Learning and attention disorders, and executive skills in children and adolescents Books Written with Co-Author Richard Guare (Ph.D. ’82) • Executive Skills in Children and Adolescents (2nd ed.) • Smart but Scattered • Coaching the Student with Executive Skills Deficits (forthcoming) Awards • Lifetime Achievement Award (NASP, 2006) • Distinguished Services Award (ISPA, 2010)
Learn more about the C&SP program at curry.virginia.edu/academics/areas-of-study
Alumni Briefs Lela R. McKnightEily (M.Ed. ‘99, Ph.D. ‘03) works as a clinical psychologist/epidemiologist for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. Lela says, “Public health is an exciting field because my work as an epidemiologist can positively impact health policy and broad level societal changes on a domestic and global level.” Lela was recently interviewed by NBC Nightly News for her sleep study published in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. She is the mother of “an absolutely amazing one-year-old boy.” Michael B. Ripski (M.Ed. ‘06, Ph.D. ‘10) was recently promoted to executive director of The Achievement Network in New Orleans, where he helps schools raise student achievement by teaching school leaders how to develop teachers and training them how to utilize student learning data. “I get to be part of educational transformation that is improving the life opportunities of kids in New Orleans,” he says. Michael is engaged to marry Morgan Carter. Suzie Button (M.Ed. ‘93, Ph.D. ‘97) is assistant executive director for quality and clinical outcomes at Astor Services for Children & Families in Rhinebeck, N.Y., a behavioral health agency for children & youth. She says she loves mentoring young professionals and working with digital tools for improving clinical practice. Last year she received an Outcome Champion Award from the Praed Foundation. She has four-year-old twins, Sam and Molly. Suzie says, “My husband Dean and I are very tired, very joyful late in life parents.”
Clinical & school psychology • summer 2011
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NONPROFT ORG. US POSTAGE PAID PPCO
P.O. Box 400268 417 Emmet Street South Charlottesville, VA 22904-4268
class notes Leila Azarbad (M.Ed. ’02, Ph.D. ’06) is cur-
rently an assistant professor of psychology at North Central College in Naperville, Ill. Susan Bartels (M.A. ’79, Ph.D. 82) is a professor in the psychology department at Towson University in Baltimore, Md. Nicole Beadles (Ph.D. ’06) is a school psychologist at South Lakes High School in Reston, Va. Bill Belt (M.Ed. ’93, Ph.D. ’98) is a psychologist with Bala Child & Family Associates in Bala Cynwyd, Pa. Karen Brockenbrough (Ph.D. ’01) works with the Virginia Treatment Center for Children at VCU in Richmond. Sue Burkholder (Ed.D. ’94) is a retired school administrator. Anna Flink (M.Ed. ’70) is enjoying retirement. Wendy Freedman (M.Ed. ’99, Ph.D. ’03)
is assistant director at the Vassar College Counseling Service. She lives in Poughkeepsie, New York. Shawn Gewirtz (Ph.D. ’09) is a licensed clinical psychologist for Assessment & Diagnostic Services at Region Ten Community Service Board in Charlottesville. Kate Goldhaber (M.Ed. ’03, Ph.D. 07) is a staff therapist for The Family Institute at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. Julia Green (Ph.D. ’80) is a clinical psychologist at Oakland School in Boyd Tavern, Va. Dick Guare (Ph.D. ’82) is a psychologist and director of The Center for Learning and Attention Disorders in Portsmouth, NH. Kristen Gustavson (M.Ed. ’02, Ph.D. ’06) is a staff psychologist at Dartmouth College. 4
summer 2011 • clinical & school psychology
Submit your class note at curry.virginia.edu/classnotes Janet Hansen (M.Ed. ’89, Ph.D. ’95) is a
clinical psychologist in private practice in Hilliard, Ohio. Katrina Harbers (M.Ed. ’92, Ph.D. ’97) has retired from her supervisory position at a community mental health clinic to care for her three kids. Emily Hauenstein (Ph.D. ’87), after being at the University of Virginia since 1976, has accepted a new position as associate dean for research at the University of Rochester. Beth Heller (Ph.D. ’05), after several years in private practice, accepted a position as associate director of the Center for Psychological Services and Development at Virginia Commonwealth University. Karen Ingersoll (Ph.D. ’92) is an associate professor in the U.Va. School of Medicine’s Department of Psychiatry. Emily Jordon (M.Ed. ’99, Ph.D. ’03) is a preK-5 school psychologist for the local school district in Greene, N.Y. Karen B. Kahn (M.Ed. ’74, Ed.D. ’77) is an executive coach and principal of KM Advisors in Westport, Conn. Tina Lafiosca (M.Ed. ’77, Ph.D. ’81) lives in the Boston area and works part-time in the Developmental Medicine Center at Children’s Hospital and part time in her own child and family practice. Daniel Murrie (M.Ed. ‘98, Ph.D. ’02) works with the Institute of Law, Psychiatry, and Public Policy in the U.Va. School of Medicine. Maren Nyer (M.Ed. ’06, Ph.D. ’10) is a postdoctoral fellow at Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School in Boston.
Julie Pace (M.Ed. ’95, Ph.D. ’99) was promoted to director of the Center for Talented Youth’s Diagnostic and Counseling Center at Johns Hopkins University, where she has worked as a staff psychologist since finishing her internship in 1999. Nina Randolph (M.Ed. ‘70) serves on the new Curry Engagement Committee. Learn more at http://curry.virginia.edu/engagement. Elizabeth Saft (M.Ed. ’89, Ph.D. ’94) organizes and co-directs a local chapter of “A Home Within,” a San Francisco-based nonprofit that provides free, long-term psychotherapy to current or former foster care recipients. Kristi Samuelson (M.Ed. ’94, Ph.D. ’98)
was promoted to associate professor at the California School of Professional Psychology, Alliant International University in San Francisco. Ana Sierra (Ph.D. ’89) is a clinical psychologist with Developing Resilience in Tacoma, Wa. Sarah Sneed (Ph.D. ’99) is a clinical psychologist in private practice in Westlake Village, Cal. Saritha Vermeer (M.Ed. ’92, Ph.D. ’97) works at HRC Behavioral Health and Psychiatry in Chapel Hill, NC. Eugenia Ware (Ph.D. ’86) and her husband John work part-time in Framingham, Ma., and are transitioning toward retirement. Patricia Worthey (M.A. ’88, Ph.D. ’92) is a psychologist for Evergreen Park Professionals in Everett, Wa. Read more about the alums listed here at curry.virginia.edu/clinpsychnewsletter