** PSYCH designations refer ONLY to courses offered Spring 2007 or later.
Availability
Internship positions are usually in settings related to Clinical or Industrial/Organizational psychology. Students should be aware that clinically oriented internships do not allow undergraduate students to practice actual psychotherapy. Some clinical internships involve sitting in on therapists’ sessions. Other internships (which might be labeled “clinical”) exist in a variety of social service agencies. In these internships, students usually work with children, mental health patients, or clients with special needs. Industrial/Organizational internships are often in human resources offices or other corporate settings.
Internship for Credit
Students can receive credits for completing an internship in psychology. Up to 15 PSYCH 495 credits can be granted in a semester; however, only a maximum of 3 credits may be applied to 400-level course requirements for the psychology major (credits beyond this will fulfill elective credits).
Students must be supervised on site by a psychologist, psychiatrist, social worker, or other appropriately trained professional. Students must also have an academic advisor for the internship from the Department of Psychology. Internships must include an academic component (see below). Both the on-site experience and the academic component must be completed concurrently.
Students should complete internships in conjunction with the fall, spring, or summer semesters. Credit must granted during the semester the student is on site, thus the student must be enrolled and registered for the fall, spring, or summer semester during which internship activities are conducted. For fall and spring semesters, students will receive one credit for every 3 hours of work per week. For summer internships, students will receive one credit for every 4 to 5 hours of work per week.
Academic Component: Reading Lists
All internships require an academic component in addition to on-site activities. This component typically involves assignments from an appropriate reading list and a final written product or assignment due at the end of the semester.
The reading list and written product/assignment should be developed in consultation with the internship supervisor and academic advisor. A final plan of study must be approved by the internship coordinator in the Department of Psychology (Dr. Richard Carlson).
The reading list should reflect the content area of the internship
and be tailored to provide scientific (theory and research) and applied
information on the student’s activities and internship goals.
Appropriate resources include: a) Introductory texts on focal internship
topics, b) Research articles and chapters on focal internship topics,
c) Applied articles and chapters on focal internship topics, and d)
Internship Agency/Site literature on focal internship topics.
Reading lists should include adequate material to outline weekly or
bi-weekly reading assignments.
For most internships, reading lists should reflect a diversity of sources, although sometimes a single ambitious text may be satisfactory.
Example Reading Lists:
1. A Neuropsychological/Gerontology Internship
Davison, G., and Goldfried, M. (1976). Clinical Behavior Therapy.
New York: Wiley.
Chapters 1-4, 9-10.
Burns, A. and Winblad, B. (2006). Severe Dementia. New York:
Wiley.
Chapters 12-15.
Randolph, C. (1998). RBANS Manual. The Psychological Corporation.
Entire Manual
Roth, D. L. (et al.) (2002) Timed-Event Sequential Analysis of
Agitation in Nursing Home Residents During Personal Care Interactions
With Nursing Assistants. The Gerontological Society of America.
pp. 461-468.
Roth, D. L. (et al) (2003) Psychometric Analysis of the Revised
Memory and Behavior Problems Checklist: Factor Structure of Occurrence
and Reaction Ratings. American Psychological Association.
Entire Article.
Robinson, A. , Spencer, B., and White, L. (1989) Understanding
Difficult Behaviors. Alzheimer's Association.
Entire Manual.
2. A General Mental Health Services Internship
Feltham, C., and Horton, I. (2006). The Sage Handbook of Counselling
and Psychotherapy. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Selected chapters.
Johnstone, L., and Dallos, R. (2006). Formulation in psychology
and psychotherapy: Making sense of people's problems. New York:
Routledge.
Selected Chapters
Luborsky, L., & Luborsky, E. (2006). Research and psychotherapy:
The vital link. Lanham, MD: Jason Aronson.
Selected chapters
Freeman, A., Pretzer, J., Fleming, B., and Simon, K. (2004). Clinical
applications of cognitive therapy (2nd Ed.). New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum
Publishers.
Selected chapters
3. A Child Clinical Internship
Shapiro, P., Friedberg, R. D., & Bardenstein, K. K. (2006). Child
and adolescent therapy: Science and art. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
Selected Chapters
Bratton, S. C., Landreth, G. L., Kellam, T., & Blackard, S. R.
(2006). Child parent relationship therapy (CPRT) treatment manual:
A 10-session filial therapy model for training parents. New York:
Routledge.
Entire Manual
Wilmshurst, L. (2005). Essentials of Child Psychopathology. Hoboken,
NJ: Wiley.
Selected Chapters
Stern, M. B. (2002). Child-friendly therapy: Biopsychosocial innovations
for children and families. New York: Norton.
Selected Chapters
Hobday, A., Kirby, A., & Ollier, K. (2002). Creative therapy
for children in new families. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
Selected Chapters
Academic Component: Written Products
The purpose of the academic component is for the student to integrate daily practicum experiences and psychological scholarship. The academic component is evaluated on the basis of written products that reflect this integration. The plan of study should include written components reflecting periodic progress (for example, journal entries) and a final, more integrative product (for example, a term paper). The scope of the written products should reflect the number of credits the student receives. The specific written products should be developed in consultation with the academic advisor and supervisor and described in the academic plan.
Final Grades
Final grades for PSYCH 495 are assigned by the faculty internship supervisor based on the final written product and a letter of evaluation from the internship supervisor. Students on internships must request an evaluation letter from their on site supervisor be sent to the PSYCH 495 academic advisor by the end of the internship semester.
In order to receive credit for internships, students must complete the following steps:
1. Find an internship site. Students may complete internships anywhere
they are available. It is up to the student to find a site. One useful
approach is the contact human services agencies listed in the “blue
pages” of most phone books.
2. Find an on-site supervisor (at the internship itself).
3. Meet with the internship coordinator in the Psychology Department
(Dr. Richard Carlson, racarlson@psu.edu)
to: a) determine if the internship site and supervisor are appropriate
for PSYCH 495, b) identify a Penn State faculty member to serve as the
faculty internship supervisor for the internship, and c) discuss development
of the plan of study.
4. Write a 1 to 3 page summary outlining the work to be completed at
the internship site, the reading list, and the written products to be
completed.
5. Complete an internship form which
outlines the procedure for completing an internship for credit and get
signatures from the internship supervisor, faculty internship supervisor,
and internship coordinator. Forms are available on the web and in the
Records and Advising Office in 111 Moore Building.
6. Submit the signed form and plan of study to the Records and Advising
Office in 111 Moore Building.
Paid or Volunteer Internships
Students who arrange to be paid for an internship may also receive
credit, but that requires work that goes beyond the paid work. Some
students (usually who don’t need elective credit or do not want
to pay for credits) participate in volunteer internships where they
receive neither credit nor pay. Both paid and volunteer internships
can be valuable experiences. Students may still list the experience
on a resume or curriculum vitae (CV).
This page was last updated on 08-06-07.