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Doctor of Psychology in Health Service Psychology

Program Overview/Mission

The Doctor of Psychology (Psy.D.) in Health Service Psychology (Combined Clinical/School) provides broad practitioner-scientist training with an emphasis on clinical practice.  The aim is to prepare students for careers as health professionals in clinical and school settings. The overarching model of the program is the provision of health services with particular emphasis on cognitive-behavioral psychology.  Graduates from this program are well prepared to function as licensed professional psychologists in a variety of roles across a variety of settings.

The field of psychology, this program, and its individual faculty highly value diversity, understanding, inclusiveness, compassion, and equal human rights, and strongly reject and condemn violence, intimidation, discrimination, and judgmental action towards groups or individuals in all forms. Given our field's acute focus and understanding of the human toll exacted by these societal problems, psychology has an important ethical role in advocacy and educating the broader public in hopes of minimizing these problems for individuals and groups in our societies. Our program actively seeks to reduce systemic barriers for our clients and students. Review the APA Advocacy page to learn more about some of these important areas and how they can be supported.


Program Degrees

Accreditation Information

The PsyD in Health Service Psychology was fully accredited by the American Psychology Association in August 2023. Questions related to the program's accreditation status should be directed to the Commission on Accreditation: Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation, American Psychological Association, 750 1st Street NE, Washington, DC 20002; Phone: 202-336-5979; Fax: 404-679-4558; apaaccred@apa.org; www.apa.org/ed/accreditation

Admission Requirements

  • Health Service Psychology Psy.D.
  • Admission Deadline
    • Fall Only
      • Application Deadline: December 15
  • Application
    • Apply online through the UHCL Graduate Application Portal for admission to the University of Houston-Clear Lake as a graduate student.
      • Log In or first users create a new account
      • Select Fall term and student type (Domestic or International)
      • Select "College of Human Sciences and Humanities"
      • Select "Clin Psych/School Psych PsyD"
    • Documents for admission are submitted after completion of the Apply Texas application. All required documents are due by the program application deadline.
      • Program application is only available within the selected Fall semester.
  • Application Requirements
    • Official Transcripts: Students should submit official transcripts from every college or university attended to the University of Houston-Clear Lake, Office of Admissions or International Admissions.
      • Please review New Student Admissions in the Graduate Catalog under Transcripts and Records Information to learn how to submit an official college transcript to UHCL.
    • GRE Scores Optional for 2023-24 Cycle:
      • If you would like to take the General GRE Exam, please visit their website www.gre.org.
      • UHCL GRE Code: 6916 – UNIV HOUSTON CLEAR LAKE – Grad
    • Required Additional Supporting Documents:
      • The following two documents should be uploaded through the UHCL Graduate Application Portal:
        • Curriculum Vitae: An expanded résumé describing previous education; all work experience; relevant course work and relevant volunteer activities; any honors, presentations, papers, avocations or other relevant life experiences.
        • Statement of purpose and goals (not to exceed 1,000 words): describing your reasons for wanting this degree and how it fits into career goals.
      • Three (3) letters of recommendation and ratings: Students identify recommenders through the UHCL Graduate Application Portal. Once recommenders and contact information is submitted, recommenders will receive an email to a link to submit the letter of recommendation and ratings. Letters of Recommendation and ratings from academic faculty and/or work supervisors who know the applicant well are preferred.

      • Program Application Fee: In addition to the university application fee, there is an additional program application fee of $50 for the Health Service Psychology Psy.D. program. The program application fee may be paid by credit card online or by check payable to "University of Houston-Clear Lake" and send it to: 

        UHCL PsyD Program Applications
        University of Houston-Clear Lake
        2700 Bay Area Blvd., Box 73
        Houston, TX 77058
  • Qualification for Admissions

    The following qualifications are the typical qualifications. They are not requirements, as all applications are reviewed.

    • Degree Requirements: Earned Bachelor's, Master's, or Specialist degree in psychology, clinical psychology, school psychology, or a closely related discipline.
    • GPA Qualifications: GPA of 3.3 or higher for those entering with an undergraduate degree only or GPA of 3.5 or higher for those entering with graduate credit or an earned graduate degree.
  • Admission Review Process 

    After initial review of the application materials (application, recommendations, and supplemental material) an admissions committee will invite selected applicants to campus for an interview. Interviews will typically be scheduled in February. Applicants will be notified of their program admission status by April 15.

Program Faculty

Sarah Griffin
Sarah Griffin

Sarah Griffin

Assistant Professor of Health Service Psychology & Clinical Psychology,
Human Sciences and Humanities

Contact number: 281-283-3355
Email: griffins@uhcl.edu
Office: B2617.08

Sarah Griffin Faculty Bio

Sean Lauderdale

Sean Lauderdale

Assistant Professor of Health Service Psychology & Clinical Psychology,
Human Sciences and Humanities

Contact number: 281-283-3305
Email: lauderdale@uhcl.edu
Office: HSB 1508.15

Sean Lauderdale Faculty Bio

Ashley MacPherson

Ashley MacPherson

Assistant Professor of Health Service Psychology & Clinical Psychology,
Human Sciences and Humanities

Email: macpherson@uhcl.edu
Office: Bayou 1508.03

Ashley MacPherson Faculty Bio

Valerie Morgan

Valerie Morgan

Assistant Professor of Health Service Psychology,
Human Sciences and Humanities

Contact number: 281-283-3375
Email: morganva@uhcl.edu
Office: Bayou 2529.03

Valerie Morgan Faculty Bio

Erik Reinbergs
Erik Reinbergs

Erik Reinbergs

Assistant Professor of School Psychology,
Human Sciences and Humanities

Contact number: 281-283-3322
Email: reinbergs@uhcl.edu
Office: Bayou Building 2617.14

Erik Reinbergs Faculty Bio

Anthony Roberson
Anthony Roberson

Anthony Roberson

Assistant Professor of School & Health Service Psychology,
Human Sciences and Humanities

Email: robersona@uhcl.edu

Anthony Roberson Faculty Bio

Mary Short

Mary B. Short

Professor of Clinical Psychology, and Director of Clinical Training,
Human Sciences and Humanities

Contact number: 281-283-3324
Email: ShortMB@uhcl.edu
Office: Bayou 1508.26

Mary B. Short Faculty Bio

Gill Strait

Gill Strait

Associate Professor of School Psychology and Health Service Psychology, School Psychology Program Director,
Human Sciences and Humanities

Contact number: 281-283-3494
Email: strait@uhcl.edu
Office: Bayou 2529.04

Gill Strait Faculty Bio

Michael VanWie

Mike Van Wie

Assistant Professor of School & Health Service Psychology,
Human Sciences and Humanities

Email: vanwie@uhcl.edu
Office: Bayou 1508.16

Mike Van Wie Faculty Bio

Curriculum and Instruction

As a practitioner-scientist program, the PsyD program's primary aim is to train practitioners, scholars, and applied researchers in the areas of Clinical and School Psychology.  The program develops graduates who use scientific methods in the professional practice of psychology with the aim or improving health and behavioral-health outcomes.  The program emphasizes the importance of the scientific method as the primary basis for advancing knowledge and informing practice.  Graduates will be competent in evidence-based practice (assessment, intervention, and consultation).  The program emphasizes the reciprocal relationship between psychological, biological, and social aspects of both personal and community health.  Through coursework, clinical experiences, and research, students may individualize their training, including clinical, school, and clinical-health experiences.

The PsyD program at the University of Houston-Clear Lake is guided by eight competencies designed to ensure that all candidates attain the requisite knowledge base that serves as a foundation for all psychological practice, acquire skills in the techniques that constitute the practice of psychology, develop skills to analyze and conduct research, understand and adhere to ethical practice in psychology, and become culturally competent practitioners. Specifically, the competencies are: 

  1. Research - To train students to conduct and consume research and to disseminate this psychological knowledge through publication, presentation, and practice
  2. Ethical and Legal Standards - To enable students to understand ethical, legal, and professional issues and to adhere to ethical and legal standards in all of their professional activities
  3. Individual and Cultural Diversity - To enable students to understand and appreciate individual differences and diversity, thereby becoming culturally competent in the delivery of psychological services
  4. Professional Values, Attitudes, and Behaviors – To train students to have the knowledge and skills necessary to conduct themselves professionally
  5. Communication and Interpersonal Skills - Write and present professional products, including articles, evaluations, treatment plans, progress notes, case presentations, and presentations
  6. Assessment - To competently administer and use multimodal and multimethod assessment approaches as well as empirically-based diagnostic techniques and to write professional evaluations
  7. Intervention – To competently implement multimodal and empirically-supported treatment approaches and treatment plans and to write professional intake reports, treatment plans, and progress notes
  8. Supervision – To develop skills in training and supervising others by demonstrating knowledge of models and methods of clinical supervision and demonstrate ability to supervise master’s level students in assessment and treatment
  9. Consultation and Interprofessional/Interdisciplinary Skills - To develop skills to collaborate effectively with psychologists and other individuals or groups to solve problems, share knowledge, or promote professional activities

Student Data and Outcomes

Student Resources

Additional Information

For information, please contact:

Dr. Mary Short
Full Professor of Clinical Psychology
Program Director
ShortMB@uhcl.edu

For immediate assistance, please call or email Department Assistant III, Shelly Matejka, at 281-283-3491 or Matejka@uhcl.edu