PsyD dissertation topics

  • Native American Veteran’s Perceived Barriers and Facilitators of Seeking Treatment for PTSD
  • Resilience in First-Generation Colege students
  • An Examination of the Mediating Relations between Traditional Mexican Cultural Values and MMPI-2 Scales L, K, and 5 with Mexican Americans
  • Effects of Equine-Facilitated Psychotherapy on Mental Health Outcomes: Meta and Content Analyses
  • The Influence of Adult Attachment on Relationship Satisfaction Levels Moderated by Perceptions of Text Messaging
  • Relationship among Racial Identity Integration, Cognitive Processes, and Attitudes towards RAcial Issues and Diversity among Multiracial Individuals
  • Posttraumatic Growth in Chicana/Latina Survivors of Sexual Assult
  • Effect of Hypnosis on Phantom Limb Pain
  • Friendship Selection among African Americans
  • Islamophobia and the Muslim American Identity: An Exploration of Gender, SES, and Self-Esteem
  • The Effect of Interaction with a Therapy Dog on College Student Stress Levels as Measured by Physiological Indications
  • The CTS2: One Size Does Not Fit All
  • Towards a Middle Eastern and North African [MENA] Psychology: Exploring MENA identity in a Post-9/11 Global Context
  • The Effects of Perceived Discrimination and Cultural Protective Factors on Latinos’/as’ Psychological Health
  • A Multicultural Examination of the Relationship Between Coping and Well-Being in Parents of Children with Disabilities
  • The Relationship between Psychological Flexibility, Nonattachment, and Bicultural Identity Integration
  • Radically Coming To Be: The Black Masculine’s Construction of Identity, Race, and Culture, and Contextual Elements of Sexuality
  • Qualitative and Narrative Assessment of Self-Concept and Identity: A Grounded Theory on Ethnic and Racial Labeling in America
  • Social Cognitive Career Theory [SCCT] and Mexican/Mexican-American Youth Career Development, with a Special Focus on STEM fields
  • Gender Differences in Academic Outcomes: The Role of Self-Efficacy and Racial Identity
  • Effects of Hypnosis on Regression to Primary Process Thinking
  • Testing a Dialectical Model of Meaning in Life and Well-Being in Four Cultures
  • Understanding and Quantifying the Roles of Perceived Social Support, Pet Attachment, and Adult Attachment in Adult Pet Owners’ Sense of Well-Being
  • The Effects of Deployment Stress and Cognitive Schema Disruption on Relationship Satisfaction among Non-Marital and Marital Partners of Service Members
  • Exploring the Indigenous Structure of Vietnamese Personality: A Lexical Approach
  • Positive Adaptation in Women Following Sexual Assault: A Grounded Theory Study
  • Comparison of a Cognitive Behavioral Plus Life Review Intervention and a Life Review Only Intervention for Retired Adults over Age 65
  • Efficacy of Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing [EMDR] for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder [PTSD].
  • Integrating Personality and Coping in Predicting Well-Being across Cultures
  • Personality and Cultural Determinants of Social Anxiety in Asian Americans
  • Effects of Stereotype Threat on Low-Income Individuals
  • The Relationship between Gender Role Conflict and Self and Other Awareness in Male Counselors Treating Men.
  • Childhood Gender Nonconformity and Adult Drive for Muscularity
  • Qualitative and Narrative Assessment of Self Concept and Identity: A Grounded Theory and Ethnic and Racial Labeling in America.
  • Effects of Brief Ego State Therapy on Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: A Manualized Approach
  • Effects of Perceived Discrimination on Asian Americans: A Daily Process Study
  • Understanding and Quantifying the Roles of Perceived Social Support, Pet Attachment, and Adult Attachment in Adult Pet Owners’ Sense of Well-Being
  • Integrating Personality & Spirituality as Predictors of Subjective Well-Being
  • The Influence of Perceived Social Support on the Relationship Between Acculturation and Subjective Well-Being among Asian Indians
  • Social Cognitive Career Theory and Hispanic Youth Career Development with a Special Focus on STEM Fields
  • The Effects of Yoga on Body Dissatisfaction, Self-Objectification, and Mindfulness of the Body in College Women
  • Integrating Personality and African American Racial/Ethnic Identity in a Comprehensive Model of Perceived Discrimination and Well-Being
  • Self-Determination and Hedonic Well-being in a Cross-Cultural Perspective
  • A Psychosociocultural Investigation of Psychological Well-Being among Chicana/o Undergraduates
  • Biculturalism and Personality as Predictors of Subjective Well-Being in Chinese Americans
  • The Validity of the Strong Interest Inventory in Predicting College Major Choice and Academic Achievement
  • Familismo, Enculturation and Acculturation as Predictors of Psychological Well-Being
  • Hypnosis of Pain: Live vs. Audio Recorded Inductions
  • Cross Cultural Differences in Response Styles
  • Nisei, Sansei, and Yonsei: Acculturation, Ethnic Identity, and Subjective Well-Being among Three Generations of Japanese Americans
  • The Structure and Measurement of Self-Construals: A Cross-Cultural study of the Self-Construals Scale
  • Toward Measurement of Self-Efficacy for Cross-Cultural Research
  • The Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scale, Form C: Normative Data of an American Indian Sample
  • The Influence of Psychological Separation and Attachment on The Career Development of Filipino Americans
  • The Experiences of Latina Graduate Students in Psychology Programs
  • Experimental Pain in Hypnosis Research: Ischemic vs. Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation [Tens]
  • Battered Women’s Evaluations of their Intimate Partners as a Possible Mediating Factor between Abuse and Self-Concept
  • An Investigation of Taiwanese Norms For the Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scale: Form C [Mandarin Chinese Translation]
  • Examining the Relationship between Race Related Stressors and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder among African American Male Vietnam Veterans
  • Is Beauty In The Eye Of The Beholder Or The Dominant Culture? Acculturation, Ethnic Identity, and Facial Attractiveness Perceptions of Asian American Women
  • Testing Sociocultural and Ethnocultural Models of Eating Disorder Symptomatology in Asian-Indian American Women
  • Development and Validation of an Enculturation Scale For Filipino Americans
  • Spirituality and Race in the Counseling Preferences of African American Adults
  • Relating Implicit Theories of Personality, Self-Monitoring and Self-Construals in the United States and Japan: Testing an Integrated Cultural Trait Psychology Theory
  • The Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scare, Form C: Normative Data of A Mexican Sample

Each student must complete a dissertation, which may consist of an original empirical research study, an extensive critical review and integration of the literature on a topic in the field, or a detailed clinical analysis of a series of cases representing a particular problem or diagnosis. The student must successfully defend the dissertation before a committee of faculty members.

The Dissertation Process.

  • Statistical Applications [Year III]. This course reviews the basic methods of statistical analysis for quantitative data and introduces the student to computer software used for data analysis.
  • Dissertation Mentoring I, II, III. Starting with the summer semester of Year II, students begin a course sequence that is designed to assist them in determining a dissertation topic and developing the dissertation proposal.
  • Dissertation Advising I: Proposal Development Phase I. Following the third semester of Dissertation Mentoring, students meet individually with the Dissertation Chair to complete a full draft of the formal dissertation proposal and related requirements.
  • Dissertation Advising II: Proposal Development Phase II.  Following completion of the proposal draft and review by the Dissertation Committee, students meet individually with the Dissertation Chair to incorporate feedback from the Committee and to complete the formal dissertation proposal.
  • Dissertation Advising III:  Proposal Development Phase III. Following completion of the proposal, students meet individually with the Dissertation Chair to complete and submit the IRB application and related requirements, and to secure IRB approval to conduct the dissertation research.
  • Dissertation Advising: Continuation.  Students continue and complete the dissertation project under the guidance of the Dissertation Chair, in collaboration with committee members. 

In the early stages of the dissertation process, the Year III students present their proposed topics in a poster session. Here is a link to the poster session held in November 2019.

You've watched other classmates sweating over their dissertation topics, poring over the literature, agonizing over their research design, writing and editing. Now, it's your turn.

But, when and how do you begin?

Ideally, dissertation advisers say, students identify a research interest in the first or second year of their program and then use that general area as a theme throughout their coursework. But students don't need to view that general area as a trajectory of their career. Instead, experts encourage students to view the dissertation as a teaching exercise, in which they learn how to conduct, design and analyze independent research.

So first off, you need a topic.

"The topic is the foundation for everything-with a good topic and research question, you'll be set to go," says Melinda Stoops, PhD, a director of the counseling center at Framingham State College in Framingham, Mass., who has spoken at APA conferences on writing the dissertation.

Experts offer the following advice on tackling these beginning stages of your dissertation-from getting organized to narrowing your topic to identifying your problem and research questions.

Then, take it one chapter at a time, dissertation advisers say.

 PICKING A TOPIC

When deciding your topic, keep in mind that you will undoubtedly spend the next few years immersed in it, says psychologist John Cone, PhD, a professor emeritus at Alliant International University [AIU] and co-author with Sharon Foster, PhD, of "Dissertations and Theses from Start to Finish" [APA, 1993]. Cone advises the following steps to pick a topic:

  • Ask a favorite professor, preferably one active in research, about possible topics.

  • Read departmental information on the research interests of the faculty to find a topic a faculty member is interested in as well. Consider asking the faculty member to be a part of your dissertation committee, which will help guide you in your research.

  • Read an empirical paper that interests you and see what future research is suggested in the discussion section.

  • Think about term papers you enjoyed writing and choose a topic that reflects those interests.

  • Sift through literature reviews in your areas of interest-such as in the Annual Review of Psychology, Psychological Bulletin and Clinical Psychology Review.

  • Avoid topics in which you are overly emotionally involved-such as research on depression if you or a family member is depressed. Such emotional elements can interfere with your research, Cone says.

To narrow your focus, identify what within your chosen topic area interests you, says Foster, a psychology professor at AIU. Bounce ideas off a mentor and consult the literature to determine what has been done before, she advises. Also, consider choosing a topic that you've already been exposed to, such as through your master's thesis or a research project.

That's exactly what sixth-year doctoral student Jody Ernst did. Ernst-who is in the University of Texas at Austin's individual differences and evolutionary psychology program-has spent her entire graduate career researching behavioral genetics.

"Selecting the topic sort of fell into place naturally as a product of the research I have been doing for the past five years," Ernst says. In particular, her dissertation investigates the genetic factors that influence problem behavior development over the life span.

"It is helpful to choose a topic that builds upon past work you have done," Ernst says. "I think this makes the process of identifying the big questions much easier because you are already familiar with the relevant literature."

But, make sure you have passion for the topic. Nate Tomcik-a fifth-year doctoral student in the clinical psychology program at the University of Tennessee-has an interest in his research on therapists' views of couples therapy because it allowed him to integrate research with his clinical work with couples.

"My advice would be to not choose a topic that is an unappealing offshoot of your adviser's work or a project that you have lukewarm feelings about in general," Tomcik suggests. "It's important to remember that the dissertation is a marathon, not a sprint, and lukewarm feelings can turn cold quickly.

"If I didn't love my dissertation idea as much as I do, I know it would have been much harder to stay on track and focused," he adds.

 CONDUCTING THE LIT REVIEW

Once you've identified a topic, the next step is to write a review of the literature in the area. The lit review section will include a brief introduction to your topic, introduce key concepts and review the existing literature.

But be prepared: The lit review often is the most difficult part of the dissertation, Foster maintains.

"Sometimes you are going to feel lost and like you don't know where you're going," Foster says. "The reason for that is because you are trying to do several things concurrently-you're trying to learn about this whole field and get a conceptual framework of how to map out this area of research."

But, it's nothing your classes haven't prepared you to take on, Foster says.

Cone and Foster also suggest that students:

  • Determine how experts in the field have organized their thinking by reading chapters or integrative articles they've written.

  • Find meta-analyses, journal articles or books on the topic and scan their reference sections for other references.

  • Identify key journals that cover the topic and scan their table of contents from the past five years for material.

  • Search electronic bibliographies-such as PsycINFO [which contains nearly 2 million citations of journal articles, books and dissertations in psychology] or the Education Resources Information Center, or ERIC, which offers a database of journal and other education literature.

  • Identify major authors in the area and search for them by name in databases, such as PsycLIT, to determine if they've written on other related items.

  • Determine if related research might be published under different keywords.

For example, Foster says in her research on girls' aggression, "aggression" as a keyword didn't cover it. Without trying other keywords, she would have missed key information on "delinquency" and "conduct disorders," which use similar criteria to define the population.

Jennifer Reese-a fourth-year doctoral student in the PsyD program at the University of Denver-used what she calls the "scavenger hunt" approach for her lit review; she scanned reference sections of relevant books and journal articles and then found those referenced sources as well. She is validating the use of Jane Elliott's Blue Eyes Brown Eyes exercise, a behavior training method that uses discrimination against a person's eye color to teach Caucasians about prejudice and oppression. Reese even spoke with Elliott-a retired schoolteacher who created the experiment in the 1960s-to get background on what similar studies had been done.

So how do you know when you've gathered enough for your lit review? "I know when I go to the reference sections, and I'm not finding any new things-when I keep turning up the same things over and over again," Foster says.

 IDENTIFYING THE PROBLEM AND QUESTIONS

Once you feel confident that you've covered the literature, identify the rationale for your study, why it's important and what hasn't been studied about it before, Foster says.

To do that, Cone suggests writing a paragraph or two summarizing the literature review. Then, determine what unresolved issues are identified in the most recently cited studies-and most relevant to your study. Select one of these issues and formulate one or two research questions and associated hypotheses.

When formulating the research question, consider whether you'll be able to recruit enough participants, Stoops says. Ask your dissertation committee-which usually comprises three or four faculty members you choose when you first begin your dissertation-for feedback on whether they believe you'll be able to recruit enough participants or obtain animals, if needed, dissertation advisers suggest.

After her extensive lit review, Ernst was able to pinpoint her research questions for her dissertation on problem behavior development, including: Are there predictable developmental trajectories for problem behaviors? What factors influence the development of problem behaviors for vulnerable individuals across the life span? She identified these questions by finding the gaps within the problem behavior development literature.

Both the statement of the problem and research questions will be lumped in the introduction of your dissertation, which provides an overview of your study. But, while the introduction is sometimes the first chapter in your dissertation, don't feel compelled to have it be the first thing you do, says Framingham State College's Stoops. She didn't write her introduction until after doing her lit review and methodology.

However, Ernst wrote her statement first and then continually added relevant citations as she came upon them.

"Writing the intro first helped me to organize my thoughts about gaps in current research and helped me to identify what new and relevant information I would be adding to this line of research," she says.

 STAYING ON TRACK

Whatever methods you choose, even these beginning stages to your dissertation may seem overwhelming. So treat your dissertation as a job, Cone advises. He suggests committing 10 to 20 hours per week for 12 to 18 months to avoid becoming a casualty to the All But Dissertation [ABD] label. Set specific work hours and choose a specific place to work, he advises.

And tap the guidance of others-such as professors, peers or other mentors-who can help you through the process, Foster adds. [For tips to finding a mentor, see Building mentorships for success.]

"People who are a little ahead of you in the process can be very helpful," Foster says. "They will tell you what they've gone through and normalize your experience and give you leads."

One way to get a peer network for your dissertation: Join the APAGS dissertation listserv. 

Another is taking a class on the dissertation process. That certainly helped Chris Bernuth, a sixth-year counseling psychology doctoral student at University of Missouri-Columbia, to stay on track. The professor's due dates and the class's extra support prevented procrastination, he says.

"Very smart people can become ABD because they procrastinate or think they can write the dissertation in a couple of all-night sessions, and you cannot do that with a dissertation," Foster says.

When Stoops was working on her dissertation, she combated tendencies to procrastinate by setting deadlines with her dissertation chair. One way to set those deadlines, Cone says, is to list each step in chronological order and then use it to create a milestone chart.

And most importantly, Cone says students can be confident about their ability to complete the dissertation.

"After all," he says, "you have made it this far."

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