Wednesday, July 28, 2010

[STUDENT] APA Student Convention Programming

Hi colleagues!

As we prepare for the APA convention next month, I wanted to let you know
about some student programming hosted by APAGS and the APA Science Student
Council (APASSC). Please forward this message to students who may be
interested in these topics. Thank you!

Disseminating Research Findings-How and Why

Location: Convention Center Upper Level, Room 25A

Time/Date: 8-8:50am, Friday, August 13

Graduate Student Allowance! Science Funding Including Opportunities for
Underrepresented Groups

Location: Convention Center Upper Level, Room 32A

Time/Date: 1-2pm, Friday, August 13

Do I Have to Graduate? Career Options in Psychological Science

Location: Convention Center Upper Level, Room 33B

Time/Date: 3-4pm, Saturday, August 14

Psychological Science Graduate Superstars - Datablitz

Location: Convention Center Upper Level, Room 5A

Time/Date: 4-5pm, Saturday, August 14

Sincerely,

Gloria Luong


--
Gloria Luong, M.A.
American Psychological Association Science Student Council
Health Research Representative 2008-2010

Doctoral Candidate
University of California, Irvine
Department of Psychology and Social Behavior
4201 Social & Behavioral Sciences Gateway
Irvine, California 92697-7085

Phone: (949)824-3991
Email: Luongg@uci.edu

CONFERENCES: Links to Convention Programming

New to the APA Office on Aging website:

 

The 2010 Aging Sessions at Convention booklet: http://www.apa.org/convention/aging-sessions.pdf

 

Programs on Caregiving at the APA 2010 Convention is at: http://www.apa.org/convention/caregiving-sessions.pdf.

 

The August 2010 APA Aging Issues Newsletter: http://www.apa.org/pi/aging/resources/newsletter/2010/08/issue.pdf

 

 

 

 

Deborah DiGilio| Director, Office on Aging
Public Interest Directorate
American Psychological Association
750 First Street NE, Washington, DC 20002-4242
Tel: (202) 336-6135 |  Fax: (202) 336-6040
email: ddigilio@apa.org |
www.apa.org/pi/aging

APA Logo

 

P Please consider the environment before printing this email.

 

INFO: Guidelines for the Evaluation of Dementia & Age-Related Cognitive Change

The Task Force to Update the 1998 Guidelines for the Evaluation of Dementia & Age-Related Cognitive Decline has completed its update. Comments on the draft, Guidelines for the Evaluation of Dementia & Age-Related Cognitive Change, are being accepted on-line at the Public Interest Public Comment site, http://apaoutside.apa.org/PubIntCSS/Public/.

 

Task Force members are:  Glenn Smith, PhD (Chair), Cameron Camp, PhD, Susan Cooley, PhD, Hector Gonzalez, PhD, Paula Hartman-Stein, PhD, Asenath LaRue, PhD, Nancy Pachana, PhD, and Antonette Zeiss, PhD.

 

 

Deborah DiGilio| Director, Office on Aging
Public Interest Directorate
American Psychological Association
750 First Street NE, Washington, DC 20002-4242
Tel: (202) 336-6135 |  Fax: (202) 336-6040
email: ddigilio@apa.org |
www.apa.org/pi/aging

APA Logo

 

P Please consider the environment before printing this email.

 

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

INFO: URGENT ACTION ALERT: Pressure Needed on Medicare Mental Health Extender during August Recess

Colleagues,

Please take a few minutes to read and ACT on this VERY important Action Alert to help extend the 5% Medicare psychotherapy payment restoration through 2011 to ensure Medicare beneficiaries have continued access to quality mental health services.

Merla

X   Urgent X   Action Required  APA Practice Organization Action Alert   Date:           July 26, 2010  To:             SPTA and Division Federal Advocacy Coordinators APAGS Coordinators   From:           Marilyn Richmond, J.D., Assistant Executive Director for Government Relations 		American Psychological Association Practice Organization Cc:             Katherine Nordal, Ph.D., Executive Director for Professional Practice 		SPTA Executive Directors 		SPTA Directors of Professional Affairs 		CAPP   Re:             Pressure Needed on Medicare Mental Health Extender during August Recess   As you may recall, in 2007 the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) implemented across-the-board cuts to provider reimbursements as a result of the five-year review regulatory process, which had a disproportionately negative impact on psychological services due to the way Medicare allocates value for services.   Following the grassroots mobilization of practicing psychologists across the country, the APA Practice Organization was able to secure a legislative remedy by persuading Congress to restore 5% to Medicare psychotherapy services in 2008 and convincing both chambers to extend the provision again through the end of 2010.  Thanks to your great work, combined with strategic lobbying on Capitol Hill, psychotherapy services were the only services singled out for relief from the cut.   With the House scheduled to adjourn on July 30 and the Senate on August 6, your Senators and Representative need to hear from you during the August recess that Congress should extend the 5% Medicare psychotherapy payment restoration through 2011 to ensure Medicare beneficiaries have continued access to quality mental health services.   This Action Alert contains two requests:   *	Action by psychologists across America through the Legislative Action Center and *	Action by Federal Advocacy Coordinators and key contact psychologists through in-district meetings [details below omitted by writer of this email]   Action by Psychologists:   Before August 13 click here <http://capwiz.com/apapractice/issues/alert/?alertid=15294911>  to urge your Senators and Representative to extend the 5% Medicare psychotherapy payment restoration    If you are not able to reach the Legislative Action Center from the above link, please paste this address in your browser: http://capwiz.com/apapractice/issues/alert/?alertid=15294911 <http://capwiz.com/apapractice/issues/alert/?alertid=15294911> .          Grassroots feedback is extremely important to our advocacy efforts, so we would very much appreciate it if you would e-mail (jcook@apa.org <mailto:jcook@apa.org> ) or fax (202-336-5797) us any substantive responses (other than auto-responses) you receive from your Senators or Representative.   Targets:   All U.S. Senators and Representatives   Message:   I am writing as a psychologist and constituent to urge you to extend the 5% Medicare payment restoration to mental health services previously cut as a result of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services' (CMS) "5-year review" regulation.      Extending the psychotherapy payment restoration is critical to protecting access to Medicare mental health services.  Psychologists and social workers provide almost all of the Medicare psychotherapy services, but many have indicated that they may have to reduce their caseloads or leave the Medicare program if they are faced with these reimbursement cuts.  This provision must be extended through December 2011.   Please protect Medicare beneficiaries' access to quality mental health services by extending the 5% payment restoration.  Thank you for your time and consideration.   ...  Targets:   o   Alabama - Senator Richard Shelby (R) and Representative Artur Davis (D-07, W&M)  o   Alaska - Senators Lisa Murkowski (R) and Mark Begich (D)  o   Arizona - Senator Jon Kyl (R, Fin) and Representative John Shadegg (R-03, E&C)  o   Arkansas - Senator Blanche Lincoln (D, Fin) and Representative Mike Ross (D-04, E&C)  o   California - Representatives Xavier Becerra (D-31, W&M), Lois Capps (D-23, E&C), Anna Eshoo (D-14, E&C), Jane Harman (D-36, E&C), Wally Herger (R-02, W&M), Doris Matsui (D-05, E&C), Jerry McNerney (D-CA, E&C), Nancy Pelosi (D-08, Speaker), Linda Sanchez (D-39, W&M), Pete Stark (D-13, W&M), Mike Thompson (D-01, W&M) and Henry Waxman (D-30, E&C Chair)  o   Colorado - Senator Michael Bennet (D) and Representative Diana DeGette (D-01, E&C)  o   Connecticut - Representatives John Larson (D-01, W&M) and Chris Murphy (D-05, E&C)  o   Delaware - Senator Tom Carper (D, Fin) and Representative Mike Castle (R-AL)  o   District of Columbia - Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-AL)  o   Florida - Senator Bill Nelson (D, Fin) and Representatives Kathy Castor (D-11, E&C), Kendrick Meek (D-17, W&M) and Cliff Stearns (R-06, E&C)  o   Georgia - Representatives John Barrow (D-12, E&C) and John Lewis (D-05, W&M)  o   Guam - Delegate Madeleine Bordallo (D)  o   Hawaii - Senators Daniel Akaka (D) and Daniel Inouye (D)  o   Idaho - Senators Mike Crapo (R, Fin) and Jim Risch (R)  o   Illinois - Senator Dick Durbin (D, Majority Whip) and Representatives Danny Davis (D-07, W&M), Bobby Rush (D-01, E&C) and Janice Schakowsky (D-09, E&C)  o   Indiana - Senator Dick Lugar (R) and Representative Baron Hill (D-09, E&C)  o   Iowa - Senator Chuck Grassley (R, Fin Ranking Member) and Representative Bruce Braley (D-01, E&C)  o   Kansas - Senators Sam Brownback (R) and Pat Roberts (R, Fin)  o   Kentucky - Senator Jim Bunning (R, Fin) and Representatives Ed Whitfield (R-01, E&C) and John Yarmuth (D-03, W&M)  o   Louisiana - Senator Mary Landrieu (D) and Representative Charlie Melancon (D-03, E&C)  o   Maine - Senators Susan Collins (R) and Olympia Snowe (R, Fin)  o   Maryland - Representatives Steny Hoyer (D-05, Majority Leader), John Sarbanes (D-03, E&C) and Chris Van Hollen (D-08, W&M)  o   Massachusetts - Senator John Kerry (D, Fin) and Representatives Edward Markey (D-07, E&C) and Richard Neal (D-02, W&M)  o   Michigan - Senator Debbie Stabenow (D, Fin) and Representatives Dave Camp (R-MI, W&M Ranking Member), John Dingell (D-15, E&C) and Sander Levin (D-12, W&M Chair)  o   Minnesota - Senators Amy Klobuchar (D) and Al Franken (D)  o   Mississippi - Senators Thad Cochran (R) and Roger Wicker (R)  o   Missouri - Senator Claire McCaskill (D) and Representative Roy Blunt (R-07, E&C)  o   Montana - Senators Max Baucus (D, Fin Chair) and Jon Tester (D)  o   Nebraska - Senator Ben Nelson (D) and Representative Lee Terry (R-02, E&C)  o   Nevada - Senator Harry Reid (D, Majority Leader) and Representative Shelley Berkley (D-01, W&M)  o   New Hampshire - Senators Judd Gregg (R) and Jeanne Shaheen (D)  o   New Jersey - Senator Bob Menendez (D, Fin) and Representatives Frank Pallone (D-06, E&C) and Bill Pascrell (D-08, W&M)  o   New Mexico - Senators Jeff Bingaman (D, Fin) and Tom Udall (D)  o   New York - Senator Chuck Shumer (D, Fin) and Representatives Eliot Engel (D-17, E&C), Joe Crowley (D-07, W&M), Brian Higgins (D-27, W&M), Charles Rangel (D-15, W&M) and Anthony Weiner (D-09, E&C)  o   North Carolina - Representatives G.K. Butterfield (D-01, E&C) and Bob Etheridge (D-02, W&M)  o   North Dakota - Senator Kent Conrad (D, Fin) and Representative Earl Pomeroy (D-AL, W&M)  o   Ohio - Representatives Zach Space (D-18, E&C) and Betty Sutton (D-13, E&C)  o   Oklahoma - Senator Jim Inhofe (R) and Representative John Sullivan (R-01, E&C)  o   Oregon - Senator Ron Wyden (D, Fin) and Representative Earl Blumenauer (D-03, W&M)  o   Pennsylvania - Representatives Mike Doyle (D-14, E&C), Tim Murphy (R-18, E&C) and Allyson Schwartz (D-13, W&M)  o   Puerto Rico - Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi (D)  o   Rhode Island - Senators Jack Reed (D) and Sheldon Whitehouse (D)  o   South Carolina - Senator Lindsey Graham (R) and Representative Jim Clyburn (D-06, Majority Whip)  o   South Dakota - Senators Tim Johnson (D) and John Thune (R)  o   Tennessee - Representatives Bart Gordon (D-06, E&C) and John Tanner (D-08, W&M)  o   Texas - Senator John Cornyn (R, Fin) and Representatives Joe Barton (R-06, E&C Ranking Member), Lloyd Doggett (D-25, W&M) and Charles Gonzalez (D-20, E&C)  o   Utah - Senator Orrin Hatch (R, Fin) and Representative Jim Matheson (D-02, E&C)  o   Vermont - Senator Bernie Sanders (I) and Representative Peter Welch (D-AL, E&C)  o   Virginia - Representatives Rick Boucher (D-09, E&C) and Eric Cantor (R-07, W&M)  o   Virgin Islands - Delegate Donna Christensen (D-AL, E&C)  o   Washington - Senator Maria Cantwell (D, Fin) and Representatives Jay Inslee (D-01, E&C) and Jim McDermott (D-07, W&M)  o   West Virginia - Senators Carte Goodwin (D) and Jay Rockefeller (D, Fin)  o   Wisconsin - Representatives Tammy Baldwin (D-02, E&C) and Ron Kind (D-03, W&M)  o   Wyoming - Senators John Barrasso (R) and Mike Enzi (R, Fin)    * "E&C" denotes members of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, "W&M" is for House Ways and Means Committee, and "Fin" is for Senate Finance Committee.      Background:   Congress Should Protect Medicare Mental Health Payment   To ensure the viability of the Medicare outpatient mental health benefit, Congress should extend through 2011 the restoration of cuts to Part B mental health services.  Congress should also require Medicare reimbursement for psychologists' psychotherapy with evaluation and management (E/M) services provided within their licensure and include psychologists in the Medicare definition of physician.   Mental Health Restoration. In 2007, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) slashed Medicare part B reimbursement for psychologists due to its "5-year review" rule. Under this rule, CMS increased payments for E/M codes, raising Medicare costs by $4.5 billion. Due to budget neutrality requirements, CMS reduced the reimbursement values of all other services, with mental health and psychological testing services hit hard with the greatest cuts.   MIPPA restored payments temporarily but now needs to be extended.  Through the Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008, Congress partially restored the cuts made by the 5-year review through 2009. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act then extended the restoration through December 2010. Congress should pass new legislation to extend payments through 2011, until the next 5-year review, in which the value of psychotherapy services is being reconsidered by CMS.    Extending the psychologist payment restoration is crucial to protecting access to Medicare mental health services.  Psychologists and social workers provide almost all of the Medicare psychotherapy and testing services, but many have indicated that they may have to reduce their caseloads or leave Medicare if they are faced with these reimbursement cuts. The cost of protecting mental health services is very low, increasing costs by only $30 million per year.    The 5-year review is different from pay adjustments related to the SGR.  Psychologists were saved from a second and even more devastating reduction when Congressional action halted the projected 21.2% Sustainable Growth Rate cut through May 31, 2010. On May 28, the House passed H.R. 4213 <http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d111:hr4213:> , Section 523 of which replaces the SGR cut with a 1.3% increase from June through December 2010 and provides an additional 1% increase in 2011. The Senate should prevent drastic payment reductions from taking place by passing H.R. 4213. Ultimately Congress must replace the flawed SGR formula with one that responsibly and permanently addresses provider payments.       Jeff Cook, J.D. Director of Field & State Operations American Psychological Association Practice Organization 750 First Street, NE Washington, DC  20002 (202) 336-5875 (Office) (202) 336-5797 (Fax) jcook@apa.org (Email)
--  Dr. M. Arnold, PhD, RN Licensed Psychologist - Registered Nurse Psychological Services, Behavioral Health  Counseling, Consultation and Education Focused on the Needs of Older Adults Western Suffolk/Eastern Nassau Counties, LI, NY Long Term Care Settings (631) 271-9863  "It is unwise to be too sure of one's own wisdom.  It is healthy to be reminded that the strongest might weaken  and the wisest might err." Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)  “It is better to know the patient who has the disease than it is to know the disease which the patient has.”  Hippocrates (460 BC - 377 BC)  

Friday, July 23, 2010

CONFERENCES: The Role of Families in Preventing and Adapting to HIV/AIDS

From Keith Cooke, kcooke@apa.org:

 

 

 

 

 

Dear Colleagues,

I am honored to invite you to a one-day conference entitled “The Role of Families in Preventing and Adapting to HIV/AIDS,” which will be held at the San Diego Convention Center (111 W. Harbor Drive, Upper Level, Room 1A&B) on Wednesday, August 11, 2010.

The conference is cosponsored by the American Psychological Association (APA), the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), the HIV Neurobehavioral Research Center (HNRC) at the University of California–San Diego, the Jewish Family Service of San Diego, and Christie’s Place.
 
The conference will highlight the experiences of families affected by HIV/AIDS and describe evidence-based approaches of involving families to improve HIV prevention and care.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010
8:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m.


San Diego Convention Center, 111 W. Harbor Drive
Upper Level, Room 1A&B
San Diego, CA 92101

Please see the agenda for a full list of activities.
 
Click here to register.

There is no cost for registration.

Please contact Terence Hendrix via e-mail with inquiries.

Regards,


John R. Anderson, PhD
Senior Director, Office on AIDS

 

 

 

Office on AIDS
The American Psychological Association
750 First Street, NE
Washington, DC 20002-4242
(202) 336-6042
(202) 336-6198 (fax)
OfficeOnAIDS@apa.org

APA logo

 

Your e-mail address was obtained from the APA Office on AIDS Database and the Office of Minority Ethnic Affairs Office Database. You are receiving this message to inform you about general information relevant to HIV and psychology.

We are making greater use of electronic communications in our correspondence to save the high costs of printed and mailed materials. This is not a promotion and you will receive this notice only once. To unsubscribe to promotional email correspondence, send your request to the Office on AIDS at OfficeOnAIDS@apa.org or you may call the Office on AIDS at 202-336-6042.

This message was scanned for viruses!

Monday, July 19, 2010

JOBS: Research Assistant, Brandeis University

Prof. Angela Gutchess in the Psychology department at Brandeis University is looking for a Research Assistant. The Research Assistant will coordinate behavioral and neuroimaging (fMRI) data collection for studies of aging, culture, and memory. The position involves traveling to collect data at the off-site fMRI center with other members of the research team, in addition to scheduling and testing participants for studies at the laboratory. Coordination of office tasks as needed, including screening of potential research participants, data coding, stimulus creation, coordinating student research assistants, and administrative duties.

Examples of Key Responsibilities:
- Administers research studies and data collection. This included recruiting participants, phone screening for eligibility, scheduling sessions, creating experimental stimuli and tasks, conducting computerized and paper and pencil testing, and data scoring and entry.
- Assists in the collection of fMRI data off-site.
- Coordinates laboratory activities and administrative matters for the lab. This includes training and coordinating undergraduate student research assistants, responding to phone calls, organizing laboratory space and meetings, troubleshooting computer issues, documenting laboratory procedures, and organizing human subjects paperwork and records.
- Analyzes data from behavioral and neuroimaging tasks using software including Excel, SPSS, and SPM (in conjunction with matlab)

For more information on the Psychology department, please visit our website at:
http://www.brandeis.edu/departments/psych/
Or the Aging, Culture, and Cognition Laboratory at:
http://www.brandeis.edu/gutchess/
Qualifications
- Attention to detail, reliability, strong organizational skills, and good interpersonal skills required.
- Must be able to multi-task and take initiative.
- Previous experience in a research setting, such as working with research volunteers, collecting organizing data, and proficiency in Word and Excel are preferred.
- Background in Psychology and/or Neuroscience preferred

Brandeis University operates under an affirmative action plan and encourages minorities, women, disabled individuals, and eligible veterans to apply. It is the policy of the University not to discriminate against any applicant or employee on the basis of race, ancestry, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, age, genetic information, national origin, disability, veteran status, or on the basis of any other legally protected category.

Brandeis University Research Assistant posting # 501054
To apply:
http://www.brandeis.edu/humanresources/jobs/external.html
Or you can view and apply for this job at:
https://careers.brandeis.edu/psp/CAREERS/EMPLOYEE/HRMS/c/HRS_HRAM.HRS_CE.GBL?Page=HRS_CE_JOB_DTL&Action=A&JobOpeningId=501054&SiteId=1&PostingSeq=1

----------------------------------
Angela Gutchess, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Psychology and
Volen National Center for Complex Systems
Brandeis University
http://www.brandeis.edu/gutchess/

Friday, July 16, 2010

Announcement--Division 20 Business Meeting

Dear colleagues:

This year's business meeting will be a little different and I hope
you can come. We will be sharing the results of the Early Career Task
Force's work and engaging in a discussion about ways to enhance the
experience of being a Division 20 member for Early Career
Psychologists. We also will be celebrating this year's award winners.
Come and participate--and stay for the Division 20 Social Hour right
after. Business meeting is Saturday August 15th,4-4:50 pm in the San
Diego Marriott Hotel Cardiff Room. The social hour follows in the
Carlsbad room at the Marriott.

See you In San Diego!

Peter Lichtenberg

Peter A. Lichtenberg, Ph.D., ABPP
Director, Institute of Gerontology
Director, Merrill Palmer Skillman Institute
Professor of Psychology
87 E. Ferry Street
Detroit, MI 48202
313-577-2297 (phone)
313-875-0127 (fax)

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

FW: CONA Conversation Hour and Award Presentation at Convention

Please note:  we will have socializing time at the outset of the program, so please feel free to join us after the Division 20’s Conversation Hour if you are attending that too. We are right across the hall!

  

 

The APA Committee on Aging (CONA) cordially invites you to the…

 

2010 CONA Conversation Hour:

Caregiving:  What Scientists and Practitioners Want to Hear from Each Other

 

Friday, August 13th

5:30 – 6:45 PM

Ballroom 6B Of the

Convention Centre

 

Bring the questions you have always wanted to ask your colleagues who work in a sphere different from yours.  Come prepared to listen and share, in an effort to truly cross-fertilize an important field that is highlighted this year by the Presidential theme.

 

The 2010 CONA Award for the Advancement of Psychology and Aging will also be presented to Jennifer Moye, PhD

 

Refreshments will be served

 

 

 

 

 

Deborah DiGilio| Director, Office on Aging
Public Interest Directorate
American Psychological Association
750 First Street NE, Washington, DC 20002-4242
Tel: (202) 336-6135 |  Fax: (202) 336-6040
email: ddigilio@apa.org |
www.apa.org/pi/aging

APA Logo

 

P Please consider the environment before printing this email.

 

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

WORKSHOP: 2010 NCSU Latent Variable Modeling Workshop

WORKSHOP: 2010 NCSU Modeling Workshop

http://psychology.chass.ncsu.edu/modeling_workshop/

This 4-day workshop is designed for the researcher who wishes to expand their statistical toolkit to include advanced modeling techniques but who may feel intimidated by statistics or may not have the time or resources to devote to a week long class. The 4-day workshop is divided into two different but complementary workshops: days one and two focuses on Multilevel Modeling and days three and four focus on structural equation modeling including confirmatory factor analysis and latent growth curve modeling. Both workshops will be conducted in computer labs and consist of lecturing and hands-on practice with running models. The overarching goal of both classes is straightforward and pragmatic: You will learn when, why, and how to do each of the techniques using your own data.

Date and Times: August 2 -5
Multilevel Modeling: August 2 (8:00am - 5:00 pm) -- August 3 (8:00am -5:00 pm)
Latent Variable Modeling: August 4 (8:00pm - 5:00 pm) -- August 5 (8:00am -5:00 pm)
Price: $500 ($350 for students) for one class or $900 ($700 for students) for both classes


--------------------------------------------------------
Jason C. Allaire
Associate Professor
Department of Psychology
North Carolina State University
Box 7650
Raleigh, NC 27695-7801

Office Phone: (919) 513-7394
Fax: (919) 515-1716

http://www4.ncsu.edu/~jcallair/CIC_Lab/

www.gainsthroughgaming.org
--------------------------------------------------------

Sunday, July 11, 2010

INFO: Please help Division 20 increase its membership for 2010!

Dear members of the APA Division 20 List-Serv,

We are coming close to the end of the APA membership year, and we are hoping to match or exceed our total membership from last year!  If you have not renewed your membership, please consider doing so or joining as a new member!  As a long-time member of the Division myself, membership has allowed me to enjoy the multitude of professional benefits of Division 20 including job opportunities, faculty development, research training, and networking contacts that will help me throughout my career.

Please visit the APA Division 20 membership page (http://apadiv20.phhp.ufl.edu/join.htm) and fill out an application to join as a new member or a renewed member.  The membership page also provides a wealth detail of why membership in Division 20 is such a great professional opportunity.

If you are a member, you will note on the APA Division 20 membership page that we have designed new brochures.  If you would like some brochures to post in your office or share with colleagues, please let me know and I would be happy to mail you some.  Please spread the word and encourage your colleagues to join!

If you have any questions, or if there is anything I can do to help facilitate your membership in APA Division 20, please do not hesitate to contact me!

Sincerely,

Joe Gaugler
Membership Chair
APA Division 20
_____________________
 
Joseph E. Gaugler, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, McKnight Presidential Fellow
Center on Aging, School of Nursing
Coordinator of Research Initiatives, Center for Gerontological Nursing
University of Minnesota
6-153 Weaver-Densford Hall, 1331
308 Harvard Street S.E.
Minneapolis, MN  55455
Phone: 612-626-2485
Cell Phone: 651-605-5611
Fax: 612-625-7180
Email: gaug0015@umn.edu
http://www.nursing.umn.edu/FacultyStaffandPreceptors/GauglerJoseph/home.html
_____________________
 

INFO: APA Division 20 Survey-Last Reminder

My apologies to thoise of you who have received this email already.  If you have already completed the APA Division 20 survey, please feel free to delete this message.  This is my last reminder, I promise!
 
Last Reminder: APA Division 20 Survey

Hello,

Please take 5-10 minutes to fill out the 2010 Division 20 Survey below. We are trying to learn more about our strengths and weaknesses as a division, and we really appreciate your help in completing this survey! The purpose of
this survey is to better understand how Division 20 can meet the needs of current and potential members of the division. Please try to answer each question. Your responses are anonymous. if you have questions or concerns,
please contact Joe Gaugler, Division 20 Membership Chair, at
gaug0015@umn.edu.

To fill out the Division 20 survey, please click on the link below or cut and paste into your web browser.  Thanks!
 
 
_____________________
 
Joseph E. Gaugler, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, McKnight Presidential Fellow
Center on Aging, School of Nursing
Coordinator of Research Initiatives, Center for Gerontological Nursing
University of Minnesota
6-153 Weaver-Densford Hall, 1331
308 Harvard Street S.E.
Minneapolis, MN  55455
Phone: 612-626-2485
Cell Phone: 651-605-5611
Fax: 612-625-7180
Email: gaug0015@umn.edu
http://www.nursing.umn.edu/FacultyStaffandPreceptors/GauglerJoseph/home.html
_____________________

Friday, July 09, 2010

INFO: Consequences of Fatherhood


THE CONSEQUENCES OF FATHERHOOD IN MEN’S LIVES
New Issue of Research in Human Development
Guest Edited by Richard Settersten, Oregon State University
The Society of the Study of Human Development is pleased to announce that the latest issue of Research in Human Development, “The Consequences of Fatherhood in Men’s Lives” (Vol. 7, #2), has just been published. The issue was developed by guest editor Richard Settersten of Oregon State University, and includes a theoretical overview article and three empirical papers built around the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth and its offshoots. The papers explore the consequences of fatherhood for men’s personal growth and identity, social relationships, health and well-being, and work and education.
For information about the SSHD and RHD, visit http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=g922645714
The Consequences of Fatherhood for Men’s Lives (Introduction), Richard A. Settersten, Jr.
Fatherhood as a Hidden Variable in Men’s Development and Life Courses, Richard A. Settersten, Jr., Doris Cancel-Tirado
Consequences of Fatherhood for Young Men’s Relationships with Partners and Parents, Jaslean J. La Taillade, Sandra Hofferth, Vanessa R. Wight
Young Fathers at Work: The Influence of Parental Closeness and Contact on Employment, Kevin Roy, Colleen K. Vesely, Megan Fitzgerald, Nicolle Buckmiller Jones
Beyond the Wage Premium: Fatherhood and Asset Accumulation, Jeffrey Dew, David J. Eggebeen
__
Richard A. Settersten, Jr., Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Human Development and Family Sciences
Oregon State University
Milam Hall 322
Corvallis, Oregon 97331
Phone (541) 737-8902 | Fax (541) 737-1076 |
richard.settersten@oregonstate.edu

Thursday, July 08, 2010

CONFERENCES: Announcement of Fourth Annual International Conference on Positive Aging

From Keith Cooke, kcooke@apa.org:


The Fourth Annual International Conference on Positive Aging, which will take place in Los Angeles, CA from December 7-10, 2010.  The location is downtown LA at the California Endowment’s Center for Nonprofit Management.

 

The link to conference activities and the call for submissions can be found at:  http://www.positiveaging.fielding.edu/

 

The participants are an energetic, engaged group of researchers and practitioners dedicated to creative ideas around later life development and what it means to age well.

 

Please feel free to send this email on to other colleagues and contact me if you have any questions.


Best Regards,

 

Katrina S. Rogers, Ph.D.
Associate Dean for the Doctoral Program

Director, Institute for Social Innovation

Conference Leader, Fourth Annual International Conference on Positive Aging

Fielding Graduate University

2112 Santa Barbara Street

Santa Barbara, CA  93105

Tel. (805) 898-2924

Email:  krogers@fielding.edu

 

 

 

 

INFO: Journal of Family Psychology -- Special Section

From Keith Cooke, kcooke@apa.org:


Call for Papers for a Special Section of the Journal of Family Psychology:

Advances in Mixed-Methods in Family Psychology: Integrative and Applied Solutions for Family Science

 

Editors: Barbara H. Fiese, and Thomas S. Weisner

 

 

            Over the past decade significant advances have been made in study design, analytic strategies, and technological support that allow for the integration of quantitative and qualitative methods. Mixed-methods refer to the integration of quantitative (numbers, variables, models, statistics) and qualitative (words, text, stories, discourse, narratives, photos, video) techniques in the study of family settings and family processes. Representing settings and processes in more than one of these ways often can produce results that would not otherwise have been found. It can bring us closer to understanding complex family circumstances such as contextual influences on relationships, changes over time, bidirectional nature of relationships, as well as the role of cultural meanings, interpretation, and beliefs in social interactions.

 

 

            This special section of the Journal of Family Psychology is aimed at highlighting recent research that advances the systematic integration of these techniques that can be applied to issues of key concern to family psychologists.  Focus in mixed-methods in enhancing conceptualization and theory in family research, designs, methods, analyses; appropriate inferences from these methods; and ways to report such research are all suitable.  Appropriate topics for this special section may include, but are not limited to, contextual influences on family health and well-being, family intervention studies, linking mechanisms and processes of family effects to other levels or analysis or to key outcomes, cultural and ethnic comparisons using mixed methods, comparing household and kinship group units to the family unit, studies of low incidence events, and advances in family measurement using mixed-method designs. Questions about the special section can be addressed to the guest editors, Barbara H. Fiese, Ph.D.  (bhfiese@illinois.edu) or Thomas S. Weisner, Ph.D. (tweisner@ucla.edu).  Manuscripts must be submitted through the Journal of Family Psychology portal (http://www.apa.org/pubs/journals/fam/) no later than January 10, 2011. Please note that the submission is for this special section.