New Courses for Spring 2019

 

New Courses for Spring 2019

 

Register EARLY!!

 

Critical studies/perspectives on immigration

Friday 2 – 4

Krystal Perkins

 

The course will consist of engagement with selected readings in postcolonial, critical race, critical discourse analytic theories/perspectives as they relate to immigration. In particular, the course will examine how the language of (e.g., discourse) and the debate around the transnational movement of people are influenced and partly determined by deep-seated legacies of racism and colonialism. The problem posed by the course relates to the persistence and resistance of racist and colonial forms.

Listening Guide

Tuesday 4:15 – 6:15

Deborah Tolman

 

The Listening Guide method of narrative data analysis is a psychological methodology and a method that enables researchers to analyze various forms of qualitative data (interviews, texts of any kind, performances, etc., in which a or multiple narrators can be identified) and develop interpretations in order to answer research questions about lived experience, in particular though not exclusively involving difficult decisions and taboo dimensions of the personal and the social.  The LG is a psychodynamic approach that is most often combined with critical theories and cultural analyses to investigate intrapsychic, interpersonal and social processes in a wide variety of contexts.  This class will serve as an introduction to the ontology, epistemology and practice of the methodology and method, including its roots in psychoanalysis, its role in and relationship to the (re) emergence of qualitative research, engagement with a research question, interviewing, the technical strategies the comprise the method and an initial foray into trying and developing interpretations of analysis.  The dimensions of asking and pursuing a real question, the touchstone of curiosity, the layered nature of human experience, the challenges of making and developing interpretations, along with the techniques that make the methodology/method reliable, trustworthy and credible will be covered.

 

Critical Race Scholarship: Theory and Pedagogy, Spring 2019 (PSYC 80103)

Dr. Michelle Billies (KCC) and  Dr. Soniya Munshi (BMCC)

Thursdays 11:45-1:45

In this interdisciplinary course, graduate students will engage with critical race scholarship to build from and integrate this scholarship into their own research and pedagogy. Readings will span an expansive array of critical race theories and methods. Scholarly traditions will include transnational and diasporic feminisms; Black geographies and Caribbean philosophies; indigenous studies and critical ethnic studies; critical whiteness studies; queer studies; disability studies; activist scholarship; and, literature addressing pedagogical approaches in these areas. Students will use course readings to craft a writing project useful in their research or teaching. They may deepen an understanding of a particular theorist or body of work; rewrite the philosophical or theoretical underpinning of their research; create a course, syllabi and/or set of teaching plans; collaborate with another student to generate theory or a team-taught course; examine internalized dominance or internalized racism and its relationship to their scholarly work or teaching; or another project they propose. Students will be invited to contribute a reading to the syllabus.

Contemporary challenges in the academy and society at large confirm the crucial need for intellectual engagement with critical theories of race and intersectionality that address systemic, historic racism. This graduate course is a means of proliferating knowledge and critiques of race in and out of the academy while developing strategies for furthering this work in the undergraduate classroom.  The pedagogical approach will foster open discussion of personal relationships to the readings as well as experiences of race and ethnicity.

 

 

Queer Psychology

Kevin Nadal

Wednesday 9:30 – 11:30

 

Queer Psychology will provide an overview of the major issues surrounding sexual orientation and gender identity in the field of psychology. The course will review historical and contemporary contexts of heterosexism and genderism, and its impact on individuals who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ). Using lectures, discussions, self-reflection activities, and other media tools, students will also learn about culturally competent skills in working with these populations.

 

Community Based Research

Maria Elena Torre

Wednesday 4:15 – 6:15

 

Rooted in an interdisciplinary and mixed methods approach to community based research, we will be working through questions of epistemology, theory, methods and ethics in community based and participatory action research. Workshopping of students’ projects a key feature of the course.

Annelise Orleck’s “Poverty Wages, Not Lovin’ It: The Rise of a New Global Labor Movement” Event

Please join us at the Critical Social and Personality Psych folk in welcoming a discussion between Annelise Orleck (Author of We are all fast food workers now) and Professor Stephanie Luce (Professor of Labor Studies).

The talk, Poverty Wages, Not Lovin’ It: The Rise of a New Global Labor Movement, will begin at 6 in room 6304.01 at the CUNY Graduate Center. Wine and cheese will accompany the talk!

This event is free and open to the public!

Click here for more details!

First Thirsty Thursday Event!

Please stop by “The Hub” for our first ever THIRSTY THURSDAY event!

Come hangout with folks from the Environmental Psychology family and enjoy a night of wine and cheese!

Please see here for details: THIRSTY THURSDAY!

Brown Bag: October 3rd 2018

Please come see Environmental Psychology Alumnus Bijan Kimiagar speak during this week’s Brown Bag!

 

Brown Bag 10.3.2018 Kimiagar

 

Brown Bag September 26th!

We are excited to announce a presentation of second year research projects by Critical Social and Personality Psychology Students!

2ndYrPoster PDF LInk!

 

Maya Little Receives Public Science Project Racial Justice Higher Education Award 2018

Please join us as we congratulate Maya Little for receiving the Public Science Project Racial Justice Higher Education Award!

 

MayaLittle_SocialJustice_9.20

To see the full event’s poster, click here ^ !

 

Maya Little will be joined by CSP Loren Cahill (Critical Social and Personality Psychology), Todd Brown (Environmental Psychology), and Urban Ed Brian Jones (Urban Education).

 

 

Brown Bag September 12th 2018!

All are invited to our first Brown Bag of the Fall 2018 Term! This Wednesday, the amazing folks at the Center for Human Environment will be discussing the work they do!

Brown Bag 9 12 2018_CHE
To see the poster, click here^

Our Brown Bag events are free and open to the public!

Brown Bag Schedule Fall 2018

Please see the attached schedule for the Fall 2018 Brown Bag schedule, hosted by Environmental Psychology and Critical Social and Personality Psychology at the CUNY Graduate Center.

Brown Bag Fall 2018 Schedule

Click here! ^

Fall 2018 Course Schedule

Fall 2018 Courses (CSPEP)

 

Please click the link for the schedule for our fall courses!

 

Welcome to the EP Faculty, Dr. Imamichi

We would like to welcome Dr. Tomo Imamichi to our faculty!

Tomoaki (Tomo) Imamichi received his PhD in Environmental Psychology from the CUNY Graduate Center.

Since 2012 he is serving an Assistant Professor of Psychology at LaGuardia Community College teaching courses in General, Social, and Environmental Psychology. At LaGuardia Community College, he has organized college wide events commemorating the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the nuclear disasters of Chernobyl and Fukushima, which included presentations by atomic bomb survivors, multidisciplinary panels, and discussions on the hidden costs of nuclear technologies.

He was awarded the Future Initiative Faculty Fellowship with Prof. David Chapin to develop and teach a course “The Environmental Psychology of Care” to be offered in the 2018/2019 academic year at the Graduate Center.

His interests are environmental competence (how to deal with challenging tasks and environments), phenomenological approaches, which includes moving-through-the-environment from running-with-a-stroller (2014) to walking-with-an-elderly, and existential approaches beyond being-in-the-world and wabi-sabi (a Japanese aesthetic appreciating the imperfect and aged). His is also interested in exploring how Environmental Psychology can be more environmental from a Critical Psychology and practical perspective.

 

Additional information can be found at:

https://lagcc-cuny.digication.com/tomo_imamichi/Welcome/

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