Maria Kim, PhD, faculty in the Art Therapy/Couple and Family Therapy Program, had her article, “Understanding Open Studio Process in School Settings: Facilitators’ Insights” was published in Art Therapy, the journal of…
Cool Course: Sandtray Play Therapy Seminar
When the word “play” comes to mind, many recall childhood memories of games with friends, days of outside exploration, or time spent in imaginative worlds. As we become adults, however, the idea of spending time just playing often morphs into a forgotten activity we are too busy and too serious to engage in.
The Lived Experience of the Covid-19 Pandemic Among Mandate-Resistant Adults | Dissertation Watch
Amber N. Peterson, a 2024 graduate of the PsyD in Clinical Psychology on Antioch’s Seattle campus, recently published her dissertation titled, The Lived Experience of the Covid-19 Pandemic among Mandate-Resistant Adults in Washington State Authors.
Facing Book Bans and Budget Pressure, School Librarians Show Their Importance
A conversation about book bans, library misconceptions, and the important work school librarians do to serve students and the broader school ecosystem with Antioch faculty Jen Sturge and Christie Kaaland.
Cool Course: Latinx/e Theories & Clinical Practice
Douglas Valdez grew up familiar with curandería, the traditional healing practices that his mother had learned as a child in Mexico. When he was sick, she would pull out an array of herbal tinctures and dapple his tongue with their bitter, dark liquid. When his skin got irritated, his mother spread tangerine peels on it—their aroma delicious and lingering.
Miranda Doyle Honored with the Oregon Library Association Intellectual Freedom Champion Award
Miranda Doyle, adjunct faculty in Seattle’s Endorsement in K-12 Library Media program, recently received the OLA Intellectual Freedom Champion Award, which honors individuals or groups who show exceptional commitment to…
Is Talk Therapy Always Right For Kids? Play Therapy Offers Another Way
A conversation with Cary McAdams Hamilton about play therapy and how it can offer alternative ways to work through deep feelings and strengthen their mental health.
Carolyn V. Hamilton’s Dare to Survive Honored as a Finalist in International Book Awards Contest
Carolyn V. Hamilton ‘86 (Seattle, BA) recently garnered attention with her latest publication, “Dare to Survive.” The book chronicles the true story of a woman deceived and imprisoned in South…
Cool Course: The Capstone Project for the MA in Teaching
“There’s a sense of fear that teachers have about getting their kids to think critically, or really challenge the narratives that are the common tropes that we hear, that aren’t actually true,” says Heather Cheney.
Three Counselor Education and Supervision Students Receive Prestigious NBCC Fellowships
Each year, the Minority Fellowship Program awards $20,000 fellowships to roughly 40 doctoral and graduate students from around the country with the aim of increasing diversity in the counseling practice. This year, three of those fellowships went to students from the PhD in Counselor Education and Supervision based out of Antioch University’s Seattle campus.
Dana Waters Publishes “Bite-Sized Autism 2: A Deeper Dive”
Associate Chair and Core Faculty for Seattle’s Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology Dana Waters, PsyD, released her second book, Bite-Sized Autism 2: A Deeper Dive. After being diagnosed as Autistic…
Antioch Sends Big Delegation to NCSPP Conference
The PsyD programs based on Antioch’s New England and Seattle campuses sent six faculty and one student to the midwinter conference of the National Council of Schools and Programs of Professional Psychology (NCSPP), the premier conference for professional psychological training programs. The conference was held on January 15-18 in Denver, Colorado. In a special honor, third-year doctoral student Emerald Ralston was one of only six student delegates chosen to attend the conference nationwide.
