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When voices are left unheard: BIPOC doctoral student feedback toward a decolonized curriculum.

Training and Education in Professional Psychology, Vol 18(2), May 2024, 105-116; doi:10.1037/tep0000468

The National Council of Schools and Programs of Professional Psychology (NCSPP) is a training council of over 80 professional psychology doctoral programs across the United States and Canada. NCSPP also hosts their Ethnic and Racial Diversity Committee to support the principles of equity, diversity, and inclusion in delegate programs. In 2020, two inspired doctoral students founded the Students of Color Council (SOCC) under the auspices of the Ethnic and Racial Diversity Committee. The dual mission of the SOCC is to provide support and mentorship for Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) doctoral students in NCSPP delegate programs, as well as to provide feedback and consultation for the NCSPP Executive Committee regarding antiracist education. In this article, the results of more than a year of SOCC meetings are summarized. The authors, composed of currently matriculating BIPOC doctoral student participants of the SOCC, provide a set of 10-point feedback meant for faculty and administration to improve professional psychology programs regarding equity, diversity, and inclusion. This article will provide the history and purpose of SOCC, its philosophical pillars, a comprehensive literature review of BIPOC doctoral students in clinical psychology, introduce the 10 points expanding on each point using lived examples, and address the implications for BIPOC students, administrators, and faculty. These points will address pedagogy, curricular design, recruitment and retention, student/faculty relationships, competency remediation, and program administration. Recommendations for program faculty and administration then follow. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved)

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 06/23/2024 | Link to this post on IFP |
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