Joseph E. Trimble (Psychology, WCE) presented an invited address titled "Bear Spends Time in Our Dreams Now: Magical Thinking, Ritual, and Spiritual Considerations in Counseling Theory and Practice" at the 27th Annual Teachers College - Columbia University Winter Roundtable on Cultural Psychology and Education, in February in New York City.
Joseph E. Trimble (Psychology, WCE) recently was selected to serve as a distinguished editorial panelist for behavioral and social science research with the Center for Scientific Review at the National Institutes of Health. Trimble has served on National Institutes of Health scientific research panels for the past 32 years, representing some 14 different centers and offices in NIH.
Joseph E. Trimble (Psychology, Woodring College of Education) had his article "The Virtues of Cultural Resonance, Competence, and Relational Collaboration with Native American Indian Communities: A Synthesis of the Counseling and Psychotherapy Literature" published recently in the journal "The Counseling Psychologist," Vol. 38, No. 2.
Joseph E. Trimble (Psychology, Woodring) recently published a journal article with Mary Clearing Sky (Michigan) titled "An historical profile of American Indians and Alaska Natives in psychology" in the "Journal of Cultural Diversity & Ethnic Minority Psychology," Vol. 13, pp. 338-351.
Joseph E. Trimble (Psychology, WCE) recently published a book chapter with Paul B. Pedersen and Eduardo S. Rodela titled "The Real Cost of Intercultural Incompetence: An Epilogue" in the book titled "The Sage Handbook of Intercultural Competence," edited Duke University's Darla K. Deardorff. The book was published in October 2009 in Los Angeles by Sage Publications.
Joseph E. Trimble (Psychology, WCE) delivered three invited presentations titled "Culture, Context, History, and the Cultural Resonance of Community Interventions," "Complex Adaptive Systems and Community Intervention Research" and "Ethical Considerations in the Conduct of Community Health Interventions with Ethnocultural Populations" at a small conference titled "Advancing the Science of Community Interventions: Frameworks, Processes, Methodologies, and Outcomes." The invitation-only conference was sponsored by the Centers for D
Joseph E. Trimble (Psychology, WCE) has had his chapter "The Principled Conduct of Counseling Research With Ethnocultural Populations: The Influence of Moral Judgments on Scientific Reasoning" published in "Handbook of Multicultural Counseling, Third Edition." Editors for the book are J. G. Ponterotto, J. M. Casas, L. A. Suzuki, & C. M. Alexander. The book was published in August 2009 in Thousand Oaks, Calif., by Sage.
Joseph E. Trimble (Psychology, WCE) delivered an invited nationwide teleconference lecture titled "Ethics and the Irresponsible Conduct of Research with Ethnocultural Populations" to students and faculty members of selected dental and medical schools and researchers at the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research at the National Institute of Health. The lecture was sponsored by the University of California, San Francisco, School of Dentistry's Center to Address Disparities in Children's Oral Health in October of 2009.
Joseph E. Trimble (Distinguished University Service Professor, psychology, WCE) recently published two book chapters. The first chapter, which is titled "The Principled Conduct of Counseling Research With Ethnocultural Populations The Influence of Moral Judgments on Scientific Reasoning," appears in "Handbook of Multicultural Counseling," Third Edition, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. The book was edited by J. Ponterotto, J. M. Casas, L. Suzuki and C. Alexander.
Joseph Trimble (Psychology, Assessment, WCE) recently was selected to be a distinguished member of the External Scientific Advisory Committee for the National Collaborating Research Centers to Reduce Oral Health Disparities by the National Institute of Health's National Institute of Dental and Cranofacial Research. His appointment is for four successive years with the possibility ofa renewal.
Joseph E. Trimble (Psychology, Assessment, WCE) presented the keynote lecture at the biennial 5th Critical Multicultural and Diversity Counselling and Psychotherapy Conference sponsored by the University of Toronto's Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. The address was titled "Bear Spends Time in Our Dreams Now: Magical Thinking, Ritual, and Spiritual Considerations in Counselling Theory and Practice." In addition, he participated in a personal "In the Therapist Chair" interview with one of the senior conference coordinators.