November 24, 2009
St. John’s Psychology Professor
Recognized by APA for Distinguished Contributions to Psychology in
the Public Interest
Beverly Greene, Ph.D., recently received one of the American Psychological Association’s
(APA) highest awards for Distinguished Contributions to Psychology
in the Public Interest (Senior Career), at the organization’s 2009
annual convention. The award recognizes the ways her work through
teaching/training, mentoring, research and publications has given
voice to significantly overlooked populations in society and in
psychology.
With nearly 100 publications, hundreds of presentations and over 27
national awards for remarkable work and professional papers, it’s
no wonder the APA granted the dynamic 20-year veteran this
prestigious award.
When asked how it feels to receive this extraordinary recognition,
Dr. Greene responds: “In all honesty, it comes as a surprise.
I love my work and I am fortunate to be in this profession--the
award is just icing on the cake.” Like any devoted educator, she
strives to pass down her knowledge and zeal for the field to the
next generation of growing clinicians.
The Senior Career honor is presented annually to a psychologist who
has made remarkable contributions to the discipline that advances
human welfare, shows dedication to the profession of psychology,
and demonstrates excellence in identifying solutions for
significant social problems in teaching, research and scholarly
productions. She teaches numerous undergraduate through
doctoral-level courses that emphasize cultural diversity and
feminist psychology.
A Career of Service
Prior to joining the faculty at St. John’s University in 1991, Dr.
Greene spent most of her years as a psychologist and Director of
Inpatient Psychology at Kings County Hospital’s Child Psychiatry
Division in Brooklyn, and in independent practice. It was at Kings
County that she was first required to design and implement training
courses for white-majority mental health professionals to
understand the clinical needs of large numbers of ethnic minority
clients. The increase in research and writing opportunities incited
her to change gears and reconsider her work in Public Health for a
career shift into the academic world.
“When I began writing for publication, I had never considered doing
so and in the aftermath of completing my dissertation, it was the
last thing I ever wanted to do,” reflects Dr. Greene. “It was not
so much that I didn’t have the skill, I just saw it in the context
of my experience doing my dissertation and thought, ‘never
again’!”
According to the Psychology professor, her director at that time
insisted she develop courses for the training programs and then
kept urging her to write about those issues for journal
publication. Her first submission was accepted in an APA journal,
is an unusual occurrence.
Steadfast in her goals to narrow the bridge for minorities in the
Psychology profession, Dr. Greene encourages her students to
consider graduate careers in the field. By inviting former
alumni from the St. John’s doctoral program who are doing
outstanding work to speak with current undergraduates, she provides
a platform of engagement to discuss future research and vocational
paths for interested students.
“I became more active in making professional presentations at
meetings and conferences,” explains Dr. Greene. The more I
presented papers, the more I was asked to write about those topics
for the psychological literature. The more I wrote, the more I
realized I couldn’t sustain that level of academic activity without
being in a college setting.”
Since her arrival at St. John’s, the McNair Scholars mentor has
received numerous University accolades including the Faculty
Outstanding Achievement award. She continues to credit the
University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Dean Jeffrey Fagen
and the Psychology department for their unfaltering support.
A Fellow of the American Psychological Association (less than four
percent of APA’s 150,000 members are fellows), the Academy of
Clinical Psychology and the American Orthopsychiatric Association,
she also serves on the editorial board of the Journal of
Feminist Family Therapy and the Journal of Women and
Therapy, and is a Distinguished Reviewer for the APA’s Society
for the Psychology of Women’s official journal, Psychology of
Women Quarterly. She is a member of the Publications Board of
the APA Division of Psychotherapy, and the Policy and Planning
Board of the Association.
“It still surprises me when I go places and significant numbers of
people have read my work and are affected by it,” she exclaims.
“When I write I’m not aware of people in the same way they are
aware of me. Of course you know some people have read what you have
written but you really don’t know the impact your work has on
someone else until they tell you.”
Dr. Greene’ s latest book, What
Therapists Don’t Talk about and Why: Understanding Taboos that Hurt
Us and Our Clients, was published in 2006 by the APA
press and co-authored with psychologists Kenneth S. Pope and Janet
L. Sonne. Her forthcoming book: A Minyan of Women: Family
Dynamics, Jewish Identity and Psychotherapy Practice,
co-edited with Dr. Dorith Brodbar, will be published by Routledge
Press in the late spring.