The Barnes Center at The Arch offers multiple opportunities for students to participate in clinical trainings, assistantships, internships and other fellowships across various health and wellness related services. Learn more about the opportunities below and apply today!
- Doctoral Internship in Health Service Psychology
- Counseling Training Programs
- Graduate Students and Fellowship Opportunities
Graduate Students and Fellowship Opportunities
Explore and apply to graduate student positions and fellowships!
Additional details are available in Handshake, Syracuse University’s career management platform. Students may access Handshake to find jobs, internships, career development events and to connect with employers.
Counseling Training Programs
These opportunities are available within Handshake. Please note, recruitment traditionally begins early each spring semester.
Individualized Training Program
As an emerging clinician, the Barnes Center at The Arch training program seeks to aid in your development while honoring your unique needs and interests. The health and wellness team is committed to exposing you to a variety of experiences, theoretical orientations and professional activities to foster your personal and professional growth. Through a multicultural framework, Barnes Center at The Arch Counseling encourages strong generalist practice with emphasis on social justice and high quality care. We are growth-based, individually tailored and geared towards the preparation of empathic, inquisitive, ethical, scientifically sound and versatile practitioners.
Training Model
The training program operates from a Developmental-Mentoring model with emphasis on experiential learning, multicultural awareness and scholarly inquiry. We value your individual professional development path, while helping to build on prior knowledge and experience to achieve competencies in clinical service provision. Opportunities are presented in a graduated way and you are expected to increase your responsibilities as well as your autonomy as the year progresses.
Training Details
Fostering the value of work and life balance, trainees are encouraged to build a schedule that reflects this throughout 20 hours per week. Typical activities include the following.
- Case Conference: Weekly case conferences are hosted for all trainees on site, allowing practice of case presentation and conceptualization.
- Case Management: You will be allotted weekly time to complete paperwork and navigate case management for your clients.
- Group Counseling: There are opportunities to either process-observe a group and/or co-lead a group with a staff member. Supervision of group is provided.
- Individual Counseling: Seeing clients in a brief therapy model for approximately 8-10 hours per week.
- Individual Supervision: You will receive one hour of supervision per week with an assigned professional staff member. During the Spring Semester you will receive a second hour of supervision from a doctoral level clinical or counseling psychology intern.
- Initial Consultations: You will conduct brief (45-minute) initial consultations with clients seeking services and refer them appropriately.
- Seminars: Weekly seminars are hosted for all trainees. These will be educational in nature and are designed to complement the experiential learning of the training year.
- Social Justice Project: You are expected to complete a social justice project throughout your training year. This involves participating in assessment and self-reflection around your needs and skill level with multicultural work, identifying an organization or student group to connect with and planning/implementing a project related to themes of social justice.
Eligibility and Selection of Trainees
Recruitment for trainees begins early in the spring semester. Placement of four paid positions will be for the academic year. Tuition waivers are dependent upon negotiations with home departments, therefore they cannot be guaranteed.
- Preference will be given to applications received by outlined date.
- Preference will be given to applicants who have had two or more practicum placements with relevant experience conducting individual and group counseling with adults.
To be eligible for placement, students must meet the following.
- Be enrolled in a mental health focused master’s or doctoral level program at Syracuse University. Examples include: clinical psychology, counselor education, mental health counseling, school psychology, social work or marriage and family therapy.
- Students must complete at least one full year of practicum prior to joining.
How to Apply | Feb. 23, 2024: Application Preference Deadline
Application Requirements
The complete job posting is available in Handshake. To apply, please submit the following via email.
- Cover Letter: Stating your interest in the position and how a placement at Barnes Center at The Arch Counseling may best meet your training goals for the coming year.
- Current curriculum vitae or resume.
- Endorsement from your Director of Training stating that you are qualified to enter into an advanced clinical training placement.
Application Contact
Julie Woulfe, Ph.D., Barnes Center at The Arch Counseling assistant director of training
jmwoulfe@syr.edu
315.443.8000
Doctoral Internship in Health Service Psychology
As a member of the Association of Psychology Postdoctoral and Internship Centers (APPIC), this internship is designed to afford students opportunities to grow and fully develop skills as a health service psychologist in a manner consistent with the American Psychological Association’s functional competencies.
- APPIC Internship Matching Program Code Number: 2538
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Full APPIC Membership
Goals of the Doctoral Internship in Health Service Psychology include assisting in the development of a well-rounded generalist in the profession of health service psychology. Additionally, the internship works to support students in mastering the following skills and knowledge.
Program Goals
Health Service Psychology Internship Application Brochure
The goal of the Doctoral Internship in Health Service Psychology is to prepare interns to become entry-level Health Service Psychologists readily able to join the profession in a variety of settings. As a capstone training experience, interns will be provided an opportunity to integrate their professional skillset with academic knowledge, self-reflection and rich clinical practice. Interns will build on their previous training experiences to deepen their knowledge and skills in a structured, supervised setting to achieve the degree of functioning of an entry-level psychologist. As part of Barnes Center at The Arch Counseling, the program provides a full range of counseling, individual and group counseling, crisis services, outreach programming, consultation and supervision of clinicians in training. Counseling is part of an integrated system with Recreation, Health Care and Health Promotion. Each department works closely together to achieve holistic student support, drawing from every Dimension of Wellness. Our training program seeks to aid you in your development as an emerging psychologist while supporting your unique needs and interests. We are committed to exposing you to a variety of experiences, theoretical orientations and professional activities to foster your personal and professional growth. Through a multicultural framework, Counseling encourages strong generalist practice with emphasis on inclusivity and high-quality care. We are growth-based, individually tailored and geared towards the preparation of empathic, inquisitive, ethical, scientifically sound and versatile practitioners. Our internship program has several opportunities that may appeal to interns looking for unique training experiences, such as the following. Counseling upholds the following training values and desired qualities of interns. The goal of our internship program is to assist in the development of a well-rounded generalist in the profession of health service psychology. We also seek to facilitate growth and development in the profession-wide competencies of health services psychology as laid out in the Standards of Accreditation (SoA) (APA 2015). Broadly speaking, our goal is to support interns in mastering skills and knowledge in the following areas. Our training program operates from a Developmental-Mentoring Model with emphasis on experiential learning, cultural competency, identity development and scholarly inquiry. We value meeting you where you are at while building on prior knowledge and experience to achieve competencies in clinical service provision. Opportunities are presented in a graduated way and you are expected to increase your responsibilities as well as your autonomy as the year progresses. Interns will be given opportunities to stretch beyond their current developmental stage with necessary support and quality supervision throughout the training year. A core value of our training program is that of mentorship. Relationships are a catalyst to personal and professional growth, and you will be able to acquire knowledge, be socialized into the profession and obtain support as you solidify your identity as a clinician. Interns can expect to receive exposure to diverse role models, have relationships with multiple supervisors and have a variety of opportunities to work conjointly with staff as part of the mentoring experience. Throughout the training year there will be a strong emphasis on “learning by doing.” You will be integrated into all facets of Counseling and will be expected to operate under careful supervision through a wide variety of tasks. Multicultural competency is incorporated within all training, including didactic seminars, supervision, clinical experience and consultation. Interns are expected to honor the importance of clinical practice informed by science and scholarly inquiry, which is also integrated into the work they will be doing. Syracuse University is a private research University located in central New York state. The campus itself is in the heart of the city of Syracuse, sprawling 276 acres. Syracuse University is organized into 13 schools and colleges with nationally recognized programs in information studies/library science, architecture, communications, business administration, sport management, public administration and engineering. On average, Syracuse University hosts an enrollment of over 22,000 undergraduate and graduate students with the campus being largely residential. Syracuse University is well known for its Division I athletic teams, including men’s basketball and football. Additionally, Syracuse University has been ranked highly as a “best college for veterans” and recently completed a $63 million state-of-the-art National Veterans Resource Center in 2020. Syracuse University has a diverse student population, representing all 50 states and over 115 countries. Approximately 10% of all students are from outside the U.S. Syracuse is the fifth-most populous city in the state of New York, with a city population of 145,252 and an additional 662,577 residents in the surrounding metropolitan area. It is the economic and educational hub of Central New York. The Greater Syracuse area is a region of rolling hills, flat plains, lakes and streams. It is situated close to the Finger Lakes region, Adirondack Mountains, as well as Lake Ontario. Syracuse benefits from easily accessible transportation options, including an international airport, regional transportation center (e.g. bus, train), and a car ride away from other metropolitan areas such as Boston, New York City and Philadelphia. In terms of weather, Syracuse enjoys a four-season climate with marked seasonal changes. It is known as one of the snowiest cities in the world, with an average annual snowfall of 124 inches. Counseling is located on the third floor of the Barnes Center, a newly built (est. 2019) state-of-the-art wellness facility in the center of campus. Our department employs 30+ full-time staff from a variety of backgrounds including: psychologists, clinical mental health counselors, social workers, and marriage and family therapists. Counseling also coordinates a graduate student training program, employing four graduate students per year in Counseling and an additional two behavioral health interns in the Health Clinic. Our staff and trainees represent a variety of perspectives on dimensions of culture, sexual orientation, gender, ethnicity and religion. We do not enforce any one theoretical approach, instead encouraging and supporting a range of theoretical orientations including interpersonal, psychodynamic, cognitive/behavioral, multicultural/feminist, family systems, etc. Every Syracuse University student will have the capacity to learn, connect and thrive in a healthy, respectful and supportive environment. We strive to be leaders in college wellness by providing integrated care and an unsurpassed student experience. Utilizing a social justice framework, we endeavor to create an inclusive and welcoming environment that is safe and comfortable for all we serve. To provide quality integrated wellness services and programs, which support a holistic and inclusive student-centered experience promoting lifelong growth and development. Syracuse University maintains an inclusive learning environment in which students, faculty, administrators, staff, curriculum, social activities, governance and all other aspects of campus life reflect a diverse, multicultural and international worldview. The University community recognizes and values the many similarities and differences among individuals and groups. At Syracuse, we are committed to preparing students to understand, live among, appreciate and work in an inherently diverse country and world made up of people with different ethnic and racial backgrounds, military backgrounds, religious beliefs, socioeconomic status, cultural traditions, abilities, sexual orientations and gender identities. To do so, we commit ourselves to promoting a community that celebrates and models the principles of diversity and inclusivity. Our doctoral psychology internship is a full-time, 2,000 hours program, maximizing its applicability for licensure requirements in most states. Interns are scheduled for 42 hours per week, which includes five hours for lunch, two hours of charting time and four hours per week dedicated to the specialty rotation area. Formal and informal feedback are provided throughout the training year. Interns will also have regular opportunity to give feedback as well. Formal written and verbal feedback are provided at three points during the year (usually mid-fall semester, end of fall semester, and then at the end of the year). Beyond this, informal verbal feedback is given regularly throughout the training year. All manner of evaluation is regularly assessed and revised upon/based on feedback from staff and trainees. Core values of our training program rest on honest, direct communication and feedback. Applicants for internship are required to meet the following conditions to be given full consideration. Applications must include, as a part of the universal Association of Psychology Postdoctoral and Internship Centers (APPIC) application, the following: The Internship Selection Committee assesses the appropriateness of the practicum training through review of application materials. Applicants are rated in a variety of ways, including the amount and types of training and clinical experiences they have, how their APPIC essays fit with our department’s philosophies, values, approaches and professional functions, and the intern’s overall fit with what our training program has to offer. Candidates who stand out as having experiences and training goals compatible with what our program offers are invited for interviews. After all interviews are completed, the Intern Selection Committee (which typically consists of the Training Director, Training Committee members and additional staff members as needed) meets to discuss each candidates’ qualifications and fit with the internship program. The Barnes Center at The Arch Counseling training program values appropriate “fit” with candidates who believe our site will be an excellent match with their training goals. Our internship in Health Service Psychology is designed to facilitate the development of skills to be an entry-level generalist psychologist. Our program requires that applicants have received a minimum number of hours of the following at the time of application. Applicants for our internship program should be degree-seeking candidates in an accredited doctoral program in Counseling Psychology or Clinical Psychology, should have completed the appropriate coursework and supervised practicums, and be certified as ready for the internship by their home departments. We generally look for a minimum of 500 hours of supervised practice, including 300 hours of direct clinical services. However, given that many practicum training experiences in 2020 and 2021 were disrupted by COVID-19, for the coming year we will allow more flexibility in the hours requirements and instead focus more on whether the applicants have acquired the necessary competencies to progress to internship training. We ask that applicants have their dissertation proposal completed by the ranking deadline. We seek candidates from accredited programs. Eligibility for employment at Syracuse University requires a background check that verifies that candidates have no criminal record that would preclude employment. *Note: Programs are not required by the Commission on Accreditation to provide all benefits listed in this table. Mentorship, supervision and collegial support are foundations of the Counseling department and cornerstones of the internship experience here. Our supervisory staff offer a variety of different theoretical orientations and/or styles of supervision, and value the importance of balancing support and challenge in a developmentally appropriate way for interns. The purpose of supervision is to assist with the growth of clinical intervention skills, foster complex and sound clinical judgment, and facilitate enhanced self-awareness around factors that can significantly impact clinical and professional functioning. Each intern is assigned one primary clinical supervisor with whom they meet with two hours a week over the course of the internship year. All primary supervisors are licensed psychologists in the State of New York. The primary clinical supervisor is allotted 1.5 hours per week to prepare for each supervision session by reviewing clinical documentation, providing feedback on video recordings and gathering training materials to share with their supervisee. The primary supervisor provides supervision of 2/3 of the intern’s caseload (approximately 12 clients) and reviews relevant notes and disposition for the assigned clients. It is the intern’s responsibility to track which clients on their caseload are assigned to their primary and secondary supervisors, and to update this list weekly using the provided document. Each intern is also assigned one secondary clinical supervisor with whom they meet with one hour per week over the course of the internship year. Secondary clinical supervisors are licensed clinicians in New York State from a variety of backgrounds, including: LCSW, LMFT, LMHC, Ph.D., or Psy.D. As a multi-disciplinary agency, we recognize the value of receiving supervision from experienced staff representing diversity in training, work and life experiences. The secondary clinical supervisor is allotted one hour per week to prepare for each supervision session. They provide supervision for 1/3 of the intern’s caseload (approximately six clients). Secondary supervisors are responsible for all clinical oversight of this caseload, including documentation and video review. Interns may opt to work with a secondary supervisor who offers a specialized perspective regarding a theoretical approach, presenting concern or client population, and focus their caseload in their supervisor’s area of expertise. Group counseling is highly valued at our center, and all interns are provided the opportunity to receive experience and supervision in leading groups. We offer process-oriented counseling groups, structured psycho-educational groups, open support groups, and identity specific groups as part of our programming. In the fall semester, interns are paired with a professional clinical staff member for group co-facilitation over the course of the year. Interns will receive 30 minutes/week of supervision from their group co-facilitator. Interns will also engage in a weekly group consultation meeting with the Groups Coordinator where they can discuss their experiences in group, show video recordings, and give and receive feedback with each other. Evaluations are conducted at the end of each semester that an intern co-facilitates group. Interns gain experience in providing supervision for graduate student counselors in training. Their supervisees may be beginning or advanced practicum students in school or clinical psychology doctoral programs, the clinical mental health master’s program or the master’s level social work program at Syracuse University. During the fall semester, interns attend a one-hour weekly didactic seminar on supervision facilitated by a senior staff member. Interns begin supervising a graduate student trainee during the spring and receive supervision of supervision with a member of the training staff 1.5 hours weekly that semester. Supervision of supervision consists of didactic training and discussion of relevant literature on various topics in supervision, processing of issues as they arise within supervisory relationships, showing video recordings of supervision sessions, giving and receiving feedback, suggestions, and support from fellow interns and the training staff. In addition to regular supervision and intern seminars, interns will also attend other meetings throughout the training year geared towards orienting and integrating them into our system: Interns spend, on average, between 40-43 hours per week in activities related to internship. All our interns are full-time. While most of the activities are required from each intern, there are opportunities for choice in the special rotation areas. The general time commitment per week is highlighted below. Activities and distribution of hours subject to change. Interns in our program receive formative evaluations in a variety of ways in order to receive continuous feedback on areas of strength and growth edges. First, interns receive intense supervision and continuing evaluation through their primary and secondary supervisors on a weekly basis. Second, intern progress and growth is discussed biweekly at the training committee meeting. This includes comments from individual supervisors, group supervisors and staff observations of how the interns are progressing. The designated primary supervisor shares with the intern feedback generated from these meetings. Supervisors (individual, group) complete a formal Intern Competency Assessment at three points during the training year (late October, end of December, and end of their training year). Within these assessments are minimum levels of achievement (three out of seven as a rating achieved on all elements by the end of the Fall semester, and four out of seven achieved on all elements by the end of internship) that interns are expected to make as they progress through internship. For more information on these assessments, please refer to the training manual. A summary of these assessments are sent to the doctoral interns’ graduate programs to provide their home departments written feedback about their progress. By the end of the training year, each intern is expected to amass at least 2,000 hours, with at least 500 of those hours being clinical work. To successfully pass internship, each intern is also expected to achieve the minimum level of expected competency (rating of “4” or higher) in all areas for their final evaluation by the end of the training year. In the unusual event that any psychology intern is not progressing as expected at any point in the year in any competency area, the training committee will review their performance and develop recommendations, in consultation with the intern, to help the intern optimize the possibility of success. In addition, interns will also provide evaluation and written feedback to their supervisors in December and the end of their training year. Interns will also have regular meetings with the Training Director to discuss or air any grievance, make suggestions and reflect on their training experience. At the end of the internship year, interns engage in a formal evaluation of the overall internship program. A core value of our agency is that of honest, direct and respectful dialogue. This is to promote a safe and transparent work environment. It is recognized that there may be times when conflicts emerge, and it is important for interns to orient themselves to the appropriate procedures in identifying and resolving their grievances. When informal attempts have been inadequate in sufficiently resolving the conflict, a more formal procedure is in place to help interns address their needs (outlined below). Insufficient professional competence is defined as interference in professional functioning which is reflected in one or more of the following ways. Insufficient professional competence is operationalized by evaluation forms and constitutes a rating of one out of seven on any item or documentation of one of the concerns below brought by the individual supervisor to the Training Director or noted on a formal written evaluation form. This is also true if an intern achieves below a “3” on all elements of the evaluation form by the end of the Fall semester, a remediation plan will also be required. Insufficient professional competence typically takes the form of one of the following characteristics. Inadequate performance can be differentiated from insufficient professional competence in that it merely reflects a skill deficit, while insufficient professional competence reflects behavior and/or attitudes that prevent an intern from reaching competent practice. Both are addressed by the remediation procedures. If there are concerns about an intern’s performance, the relevant staff member must bring this to the intern’s attention. The staff member can choose to take this step after consulting with the Training Director. The staff member must then discuss strategies for skill acquisition or ways to improve intern performance with their intern. Irrespective of how and when the staff member chooses to address the issue of concern with the intern, the staff member must inform the intern’s primary supervisor and/or the Training Director, at minimum. It is up to the staff member if they want to raise the concern during a Training Committee meeting. If the behavior or performance continues to be of concern resulting in an inadequate or unsatisfactory rating on the intern’s formal evaluation, the supervisor will discuss the areas of concern with the intern and consult with the Training Director. The primary supervisor and the Training Director are responsible for informing the intern regarding such concerns about their behavior. The intern will have the opportunity to respond formally, in writing, to the evaluation or staff concerns. The Training Director will then review the evaluation and any response from the intern to determine was subsequent action, if any, should be taken to address the concern. This may be done in consultation with the intern’s primary supervisor or other training staff members. When the Training Director is the primary supervisor, the Training Director and a minimum of two other training staff members form a committee to review the evaluation and any response from the intern to determine what subsequent action, if any, should be taken to address the concern. If at any time an intern disagrees with the following notifications, remediation or sanctions, the intern can implement an appeal as outlined in the Appeals process section that follows. Remediation procedures are activated when one of the following occurs. The latter is likely to happen with a problem or infraction so serious that it must be reported and addressed prior to the next formal evaluation period. The intern will receive a copy of any formal complaint within two (2) working days of when it is filed. The procedures are initiated by the Training Director informing the Training Committee within a week of the notification. If deemed necessary by the Training Director in consultation with Counseling’s administrative team, a Remediation Committee will be formed. This committee will consist of three senior staff members who are not the intern’s current individual supervisor. If the Training Director has a significant conflict of interest or multiple relationship type of concern with the intern in question and cannot participate in the committee, the Training Director shall appoint a designee. Remediation Committee members will gather information from collaterals relevant to the issue, as well as the intern and the intern’s current individual supervisor(s). The Remediation Committee will discuss the case and arrive by consensus by majority vote on one of the following remediation actions. When appropriate, Remediation Committee members will suggest steps to resolve the issue and what conditions indicate successful remediation within five (5) working days of their final decision. When implementing remediation or sanctions in response to the identification of inadequate performance or problematic behavior in an intern, the training staff must consider the welfare of clients and the needs of the intern in question, other interns, training staff and other agency personnel. Courses of action are determined by the remediation procedures highlighted above, and may include but are not limited to the following. Any significant concerns requiring formal remediation will need to be communicated with an intern’s academic department as well as noted on any references provided by Counseling staff for future jobs, licensure or other opportunities outside of our system. Should an intern choose to appeal any of the above-mentioned actions, they must inform the Training Director in writing within five (5) working days of the receipt of notification of the action. The following steps will then be taken to review the appeal. Intern Training Manual, Counseling and Career Services, University of California Santa Barbara and the Intern Manual, Student Counseling Center, Illinois State University
Training Program
Program Overview
Training Values and Desired Qualities of Interns
Training Model
Setting And Facilities
Syracuse University
City of Syracuse and Broader Community
Barnes Center at The Arch Counseling
Barnes Center at The Arch Vision
Barnes Center at The Arch Mission
Statement On Diversity
Overview of Internship
Intern Selection Criteria and Procedures
Minimum Requirements
Preferred Criteria
Additional Relevant Experience
Internship Admissions and Support Information
Financial and Other Benefit Support for the Upcoming Training Year*
Supervision
Intern Supervision
Primary Individual Clinical Supervisors
Secondary Individual Clinical Supervisors
Supervision of Group Counseling
Supervision of Supervision
Practice/Service Delivery Activities
Training Activities and Administrative Tasks
Additional Rotating Training/Consultation Meetings
Sample Time Allocation
Sample Weekly Activities for Doctoral Interns
Therapeutic Services: Individual Counseling
Hours: 11
Therapeutic Services: Initial Assessments Hours: 2
Therapeutic Services: Same Day Appointments Hours: 2
Therapeutic Services: Group Counseling Hours: 1.5
Therapeutic Services: DayCall Crisis Hours Hours: 1 (Varies)
Supervision: Primary Individual Supervision Hours: 2
Supervision: Secondary Individual Supervision Hours: 1
Supervision: Supervision of Group Hours: 0.5
Supervision: Staff Case Consultation Hours: 1
Training: Didactic Seminar Hours: 2
Training: Group Therapy Seminar Hours: 1
Training: Supervision Seminar (Fall) Hours: 1
Training: Supervision of Practicum Supervision (Spring) Hours: 1.5
Outreach and Prevention: Outreach Activities Hours: 1
Administrative: Staff Meeting Hours: 1.5
Administrative: Committee Work Hours: 1
Supervision of Practicum Student: Spring Only Fall Hours: 0, Spring Hours: 1
Intern-Specific Rotation: Specialty Rotation Hours: 4
Miscellaneous: Social Justice Project (Summer Only) Hours: 2
Miscellaneous: Lunch Hour Hours: 4
Miscellaneous: Intern Support Group (Once weekly during lunch.) Hours: 1
Miscellaneous: Charting Time Hours: 2
Miscellaneous: Office Time Hours: 2
Total Total Hours: 40-43
Expectations For Intern Performance
Grievance and Due Process Procedures
Grievance Policy
Potential grievances may present in different ways, including:
Grievance Procedure (Informal and Formal)
Review Panel and Process (Hearing)
Due Process and Disciplinary Policies for Addressing Intern Competency Deficits
Remediation Procedures
Appeals Process
Adapted From