Rosemead School of Psychology
Academic History
Rosemead School of Psychology (founded 1968), is Biola University's undergraduate and graduate psychology program.
History
Rosemead School of Psychology was founded by Drs. Clyde and Bruce Narramore in 1968 to train clinical psychologists from a Christian perspective. Named after its original location in the city of Rosemead, Rosemead Graduate School of Psychology, as it was then called, became the first independent professional school of psychology in the nation to be accredited by a regional accrediting association.
Rosemead began to publish the Journal of Psychology and Theology in 1973, the first journal of its kind. In 1977, Rosemead merged with Biola University, where it gained accreditation from the American Psychological Association (APA) in 1980. Biola's undergraduate programs in psychology were merged with Rosemead's graduate programs in the fall of 1981, forming the present Rosemead School of Psychology. In 2000, Rosemead founded the Institute for Research on Psychology and Spirituality. The Institute was established to extend Rosemead's leadership in integration by promoting empirical research on the interrelationship between psychology, theology, and spirituality.
Today, Rosemead remains a leader in integration, offering undergraduate programs in psychology and graduate programs in clinical psychology including the practitioner-based Psy.D. and the research-grounded Ph.D.Rosemead School of Psychology, "History".
Related
The Biola Counseling Center provides therapy for students and employees of Biola University and their immediate family members, as well as community members."Biola Counseling Center." http://www.biola.edu/offices/bcc/