Hi All,
I am applying for PhD clinical psychology programs that are located in various cities throughout the U.S...Philadelphia, Boston, Houston, Dallas, Salt Lake, etc.
I know that certain schools, student-body, or faculty may still be prejudiced against LGBT people, while others may consider being gay an asset to increase their school's diversity, considering them similar to ethnic minorities.
I've seen sample interview questions that may become personal, perhaps unintentionally. For instance, if an interviewer asks about a hardship or obstacle in one's life, and the hardship that one would like to discuss happens to be LGBT-related, then should the interviewee "come out" during the interview? Would you think this would potentially hurt or help one's application status?
Would it be inappropriate to ask about the student-body's attitude and support (or lack-thereof) of LGBT students during the interview?
Or, should I just avoid all mention of topics relating to sexual orientation?
Thanks
I am applying for PhD clinical psychology programs that are located in various cities throughout the U.S...Philadelphia, Boston, Houston, Dallas, Salt Lake, etc.
I know that certain schools, student-body, or faculty may still be prejudiced against LGBT people, while others may consider being gay an asset to increase their school's diversity, considering them similar to ethnic minorities.
I've seen sample interview questions that may become personal, perhaps unintentionally. For instance, if an interviewer asks about a hardship or obstacle in one's life, and the hardship that one would like to discuss happens to be LGBT-related, then should the interviewee "come out" during the interview? Would you think this would potentially hurt or help one's application status?
Would it be inappropriate to ask about the student-body's attitude and support (or lack-thereof) of LGBT students during the interview?
Or, should I just avoid all mention of topics relating to sexual orientation?
Thanks