- Joined
- Jan 3, 2012
- Messages
- 1
- Reaction score
- 0
If you have location of the interview for the 4th, pls let me know
Last edited:
did u make it!?If you have location of the interview for the 4th, pls let me know
drink a lot of fluids and take some vitamin c. hope you feel better!
question for everyone: for those who have had interviews at college counseling centers (more specifically phone interviews), what types of questions have they asked you? any help would be appreciated 🙂 thanks and good luck to everyone
So far I've done 3 phone interviews with college counseling centers.
1) All asked what I do for self-care.
2) All asked about my early career goals and how their college counseling center fits into my goals.
3) At 2 there is the opportunity to supervise another student, so they asked about my previous experience with supervision, what I will find challenging about supervision, and what type of supervisor do I think I will be.
4) 2 read me vignettes and asked what additional information I would want to know
5) 2 asked me what I would do if a student was considering suicide.
6) 2 asked me why they should choose me over other applicants
Some thoughtful and unique questions I got were:
1) "Tell us how you changed an intervention to address multicultural issues"
2) "What are some books or movies that have influenced you"
3) "How do you hope to be different when you leave internship?"
4) "Which professional person in your academic/clinical career has impacted you the most?"
Good luck!
Do you mind sharing where these places are?So far I've done 3 phone interviews with college counseling centers.
1) All asked what I do for self-care.
2) All asked about my early career goals and how their college counseling center fits into my goals.
3) At 2 there is the opportunity to supervise another student, so they asked about my previous experience with supervision, what I will find challenging about supervision, and what type of supervisor do I think I will be.
4) 2 read me vignettes and asked what additional information I would want to know
5) 2 asked me what I would do if a student was considering suicide.
6) 2 asked me why they should choose me over other applicants
Some thoughtful and unique questions I got were:
1) "Tell us how you changed an intervention to address multicultural issues"
2) "What are some books or movies that have influenced you"
3) "How do you hope to be different when you leave internship?"
4) "Which professional person in your academic/clinical career has impacted you the most?"
Good luck!
Columbia is the only program that I know of that does a second interview. Did you have to do a first interview in person, and then they decide who they'll invite back for the next round?So I got a call from Columbia Adult for a second interview today.
And I happened to be with another applicant from a different program who got a call too at the same time.
I guess their still inviting people!
So they may still call you.
I also got a call from Columbia today 🙂
The accreditation start is established from the date of the site visit. If the site visit occurs during your internship year (eg: before your date of successful completion), then you would have completed an APA accredited internship, even if the status was not in place at the time you matched. Sites cannot, however, predict when their site visit would be scheduled and in any case, it would not occur until after they have submitted their self-study. And there can be a long span of time between the site visit and the final accreditation if supplemental materials must be submitted after the visit. So planning to get accredited and getting accredited can cover a span of multiple years, given the complexity of the accreditation process.This may be a silly question-but here it goes. Some of the sites listed in the APPIC directory that are not APA accredited, state in their materials that they are aiming for future APA accreditation. What would that mean to someone who completes one of these internships while it is non-accredited? If they do become APA accredited in the future, will current interns be able to claim that they completed an APA accredited internship?
So far I've done 3 phone interviews with college counseling centers.
1) All asked what I do for self-care.
2) All asked about my early career goals and how their college counseling center fits into my goals.
3) At 2 there is the opportunity to supervise another student, so they asked about my previous experience with supervision, what I will find challenging about supervision, and what type of supervisor do I think I will be.
4) 2 read me vignettes and asked what additional information I would want to know
5) 2 asked me what I would do if a student was considering suicide.
6) 2 asked me why they should choose me over other applicants
Some thoughtful and unique questions I got were:
1) "Tell us how you changed an intervention to address multicultural issues"
2) "What are some books or movies that have influenced you"
3) "How do you hope to be different when you leave internship?"
4) "Which professional person in your academic/clinical career has impacted you the most?"
Good luck!
So far I've done 3 phone interviews with college counseling centers.
1) All asked what I do for self-care.
2) All asked about my early career goals and how their college counseling center fits into my goals.
3) At 2 there is the opportunity to supervise another student, so they asked about my previous experience with supervision, what I will find challenging about supervision, and what type of supervisor do I think I will be.
4) 2 read me vignettes and asked what additional information I would want to know
5) 2 asked me what I would do if a student was considering suicide.
6) 2 asked me why they should choose me over other applicants
Some thoughtful and unique questions I got were:
1) "Tell us how you changed an intervention to address multicultural issues"
2) "What are some books or movies that have influenced you"
3) "How do you hope to be different when you leave internship?"
4) "Which professional person in your academic/clinical career has impacted you the most?"
Good luck!
Sites are not required to give out this information, but they can choose to, as they are not revealing how they will be ranking you, but rather that they will not be. That could be useful information and some students might want to know but overall it shouldn't determine how you would rank.
The prohibition is on the topic of "where" you would be in the rank (from either party) because it complicates simply rating your preferences and leads to all kinds of potential politicizing, ruminations, and stress that are not healthy or equitable in a process that is stressful enough for all. Sites and students rank in their preferred order and the statistical gears do their work in the mysterious NMS machine.
It is not realistic to mandate that all sites let all students know who they are not ranking, as decision making can go very late in the process and a common view is that it is only demoralizing to get late-breaking disappointing news. It should not, in theory, change your order of preference.
Yep. Directly from APPIC's match rules:
"Internship programs may choose to inform applicants as to whether or not the applicants remain under consideration for admission (e.g., whether or not the applicants will be ranked) but may not communicate any other ranking information."
Thus, a site can definitely let you know if they plan on ranking you, they (and you) just can't say much more than that.
Although as docma mentioned, I personally wouldn't let the notification influence my rankings. If they were my first choice before hearing that information, I'd still rank them as #1, as it won't hurt your chances of matching elsewhere. There's always the chance that they still do end up ranking you for some reason, such as that they sent the wrong email to you and never ended up catching the mistake.
Thanks for posting the official policy. The site themselves has said that some students have really appreciated the feedback, but that it has been a somewhat controversial choice on their part. I know it probably shouldn't impact my list of rankings, but I think it could at some emotional level (e.g. hurt feelings from not being considered further). T
The site has made it clear that I can request not to recieve this information from them. Maybe I will choose that route instead.
Anyone else encountering this from other sites?
Can I ask if you were called back by the person who interviewed you or someone else? Are they scheduling interview days or just individual interviews? Do you get a choice?
thank you!! 🙂
wow those "unique" questions seem pretty hard. especially the first one about changing an intervention! how did you answer that? i don't know what i would even say. lol
Super interesting topic! None of my sites have mentioned letting us know if we're not being ranked, so I didn't realize that that happened.
With that being said, unless they were the only site where I had interviewed (in which case I'd rather know that I was unlikely to match), I think I'd really rather not know if a site wasn't going to rank me. If you don't get feedback on why you weren't ranked, which would allow you to improve your interview style, then there's really nothing useful to be done with that information. It just seems needlessly painful. With interviews, I'm eventually going to find out that I was rejected, so there's no sense in dragging that out. But if a site that interviewed me is my top choice and I match somewhere else, all I'll ever know is that I wasn't ranked highly enough to match there. That still seems better than knowing for sure that they weren't interested in me at all.
This year I'm working with a lot of young Black men, so I said something along the lines of how I'm not necessarily changing my interventions, but I've changed my style in how I present them, such as I'm a lot more conversational in the beginning of session as opposed to getting straight to therapy business, I self-disclose more often, and I use hip-hop & rap music to illustrate examples as well as I usually begin the group/individual session by asking if any of the guys have written anything since our last meeting because a lot of them rap/sing.
This year I'm working with a lot of young Black men, so I said something along the lines of how I'm not necessarily changing my interventions, but I've changed my style in how I present them, such as I'm a lot more conversational in the beginning of session as opposed to getting straight to therapy business, I self-disclose more often, and I use hip-hop & rap music to illustrate examples as well as I usually begin the group/individual session by asking if any of the guys have written anything since our last meeting because a lot of them rap/sing.
thanks for answering 🙂 thats an interesting example. does anybody else have examples of how they would "change" an intervention for a specific group?
i had an interview yesterday and they asked me very vague/strange questions. a few were:
on a scale of 1-10 how ready are you for internship?
what do you think of supervision?
what do you think of dependence and autonomy and how do they intersect?
what do you think of law and ethics?
what conflict have you had with a colleague or classmate and how did you resolve it?
why should we pick you over all the other qualified candidates?
If we are wow-ing at the same thing TRIPLE wow!
If we are wow-ing at the same thing TRIPLE wow!
WOW (shaking my head)we are. it'll percolate.
Let's try to be informative with our criticisms here. I think all the "wows" are because of the description of the population as "young black men", and the list of interventions being related to a general theme of "rap music." In addition to "black" maybe not being the culturally preferred label, I think many people see your choice of interventions as being based on stereotypes, rather than on the actual needs of the population. While focusing on interest of group members can be an effective strategy for engaging clients in group therapy, the lack of more specific information about the population, type of group, setting, etc., may lead to the conclusion that your choices were insensitive and prejudicial. If this is the reaction you are getting from this board, you might consider being careful when using this example during an interview.
Agreed and don't settle on that 10 session CBT thought record stuff. Get them to pay for the good stuff......... that analytical 3x's weekly for 3 years...
Columbia is the only program that I know of that does a second interview. Did you have to do a first interview in person, and then they decide who they'll invite back for the next round?
I didn't apply there, I'm just curious about how it works!
Let's try to be informative with our criticisms here. I think all the "wows" are because of the description of the population as "young black men", and the list of interventions being related to a general theme of "rap music." In addition to "black" maybe not being the culturally preferred label, I think many people see your choice of interventions as being based on stereotypes, rather than on the actual needs of the population. While focusing on interest of group members can be an effective strategy for engaging clients in group therapy, the lack of more specific information about the population, type of group, setting, etc., may lead to the conclusion that your choices were insensitive and prejudicial. If this is the reaction you are getting from this board, you might consider being careful when using this example during an interview.
I know that I probably should have sent an email given that it is way past their interview notification date (Dec 9), but I was wondering if anyone heard anything (invite or rejection) from Woodhull.
Good Luck!!!I had my interview and so I'm done with Phase I (other than ranking my 1 site and the 18 APA ones that didn't interview me).
If I don't match in Phase I, I'm hoping it's because a lot of sites all chose the same 100-500 applicants or so to interview and rank so they'll have a lot of spots left for Phase II.
Good luck to everyone!![]()