Events Calendar >

March Events

  • Currently no events are listed.

St. John's News

Psychology Professor Reelected to State Licensure Board

October 16, 2007

Professor of Psychology Rafael Art. Javier, Ph.D., ABPP, has been reelected to sit on the New York State Board of Psychology’s Division of Licensing Service. Dr. Javier, a 15-year member and former Vice Chair of the State Board, has served the Division of Licensing Service for five years.

The State Board is responsible for overseeing the practice of psychology in New York and for reviewing credentials of individuals applying for state license to practice psychology. It also handles consumer complaints against individual psychologists and conducts disciplinary hearings to determine whether a psychologist has acted contrary to practice regulations for psychology in the state.

During his tenure with the licensing division, Javier co-developed a “practice alert,” which later was legislated into a set of official guidelines for licensed psychologists in New York. These general guidelines cover issues such as record-keeping, divorce and child-custody evaluation, explains Javier.

During his 15-year tenure, “Rafael has been involved in every aspect of State Board work and has inspired everyone with his enthusiasm, interest in students … and dedication,” says the board’s Executive Secretary, Kathleen Doyle, Ph.D. ’79, who made the original recommendation that Javier be elected to the Division of Licensing Service.  Javier’s contributions include “his guidance for professional practice, fair and just disciplinary findings, and establishing high, but achievable, standards for licensure,” adds Doyle, who received her St. John’s doctorate in professional child psychology and is currently serving her 17th year as Executive Secretary of the board.

A specialist in psycholinguistics and an expert in bilingualism, Javier has spent much of his career focusing on ways in which non-native Americans mentally process and organize their life experiences. He has found that there are major differences between the cognitive processes of monolingual and bilingual individuals.

“What we have discovered,” says Javier, “is that the brain is the same across the board — meaning that a brain is a brain — but that there are different parts of the brain that are more involved in a bilingual mind when compared with a monolingual mind.”
 
These discoveries have led to significant changes in the way in which therapists counsel bilingual individuals, specifically immigrants, whose major life experiences were cognitively organized within the context of a foreign culture and language. Thanks in part to Javier’s research, therapists have learned that bilingual patients aren’t always able to use English to describe experiences that they originally processed using another language.

“Memories are often coded in a language-specific way,” explains Javier.

In certain instances, he adds, it’s more effective for a bilingual patient to orally “relive” his experience using his native language, even if his English-speaking therapist cannot understand him.

Javier’s research also focuses on adolescent suicide, moral development and ethnic and cultural issues in psychoanalytic theories and practice. He is currently analyzing data that investigate the effects of community violence on children from diverse communities.

This year, Javier has published his sixth book, The Bilingual Mind: Thinking, Feeling and Speaking in Two Languages (Springer), which serves as an amalgamation of his research and previous writings on this subject to date.

Vincentian Way
Javier, who runs a private practice and has amassed numerous awards within his field, says that he was initially attracted to St. John’s Vincentian mission to serve the poor and disenfranchised when he arrived in 1986.

“It’s very important to make sure that psychology, as a discipline, provides answers to questions about treating individuals from all facets of our society,” he says, This includes “the poor, the immigrant, the linguistically diverse, the underrepresented and the disenfranchised” populations, he says.

“By allowing these different individuals to become part of our personal and psychological discourse, we become much enriched,” he continues. “Teaching our students the importance of becoming sensitive to the various and complex issues affecting these individuals is one of the most rewarding part of being a professor and mentor.”

Referring to the University’s urban location, he adds: “Queens is so rich in terms cultural representation that it really provides us wonderful opportunities to understand larger psychological processes in a more comprehensive manner.”

A Man for All Seasons
Javier serves as Associate Editor of both the Journal of Psycholinguistic Research and the Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless. He also serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Infant, Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy.

He is “a man for all seasons, whose integrity … is a pattern in his career,” says Robert Rieber, a psychologist and Professor Emeritus at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, who for more than 10 years has served as Javier’s co-editor with the Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless.

Beginning in 1986 and until recently, Javier served as founding Director of the University’s Center for Psychological Services, which provides psychological services to community residents and training opportunities for graduate psychology students within the University’s clinical- and school-psychology programs. He says his goal in developing the Center was to ensure that psychological services were accessible to those most in need in our community.

Currently, he is a supervisor at both the Object Relations Institute and the New York University Medical Center Department of Psychiatry. He also directs the Office of Postgraduate Development Programs in St. John’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.

In addition, he directs an international initiative that explores the psychological implications of adoption — a “psychological” topic that hasn’t received enough attention from the psychology community, he says.

“Depending on when you were adopted, it might have serious implications in terms of how you define yourself and the way you look at the world,” he says. “We need to discuss these things in order to ensure that every adopted child is OK.”

The initiative, which he spearheaded 10 years ago, has spawned a University-sponsored biannual conference, several journal publications and an official textbook, which Javier calls “the first-ever comprehensive book on adoption.”