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Get to know more about Antioch's talented faculty by exploring the links below. You'll find biographies of faculty members that feature their backgrounds, interests and perspectives on teaching at Antioch.
To read about associate and adjunct faculty who teach in the psychology program, click here. To check out other Antioch faculty, visit Our Faculty.
Ann B. Blake, Ph.D., University of Washington. She uses Jungian-oriented psychotherapy in her part-time private practice and focuses on writing projects that apply Jungian analytical psychology to specific populations.
Rebecca Bloom, M.P.S., Pratt Institute. Rebecca Bloom is a licensed mental health counselor and a registered art therapist who specializes in anxiety, depression, life transitions and GLBT issues.
Hee-Sun Cheon, Ph.D., Iowa State University. Hee-Sun Cheon is a registered drama therapist and affiliate member of American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy with special interests in couples therapy, supervision and outcome research.
Paul David, Ph.D., Saybrook Institute. Paul David is a licensed mental health counselor and marriage and family therapist with a particular interest in couples therapy.
Ned Farley, Ph.D., The Union Institute & University. Ned Farley is a licensed mental health counselor in private practice who focuses on existential psychology, phenomenology, adult development, gay/lesbian/bi/transgendered issues in therapy and domestic violence.
Angie L. Hoffpauir, Ph.D., Tulane University. Hoffpauir is a member of the American Group Psychotherapy Association, Association for the Advancement of Social Work with Groups and is licensed in clinical social work.
Janice Hoshino, Ph.D., The United States International University. She is a registered and board-certified art therapist who specializes in family art therapy, multicultural issues in art therapy and collaborative research with students.
Jane Harmon Jacobs, Ph.D., University of Washington. Jacobs is currently the President-elect of the Washington State Psychological Association.
Gwendolyn Jones, Ph.D., University of Washington. She is primarily interested in the study of racial and gender stereotypes, the psychological impacts of sexual coercion and racial discrimination and the application of cultural understanding to the counseling process.
Melissa Kennedy, Ph.D., Seattle Pacific University. Kennedy's diverse clinical experience includes community health agencies, psychiatric hospital and local outpatient programs. Her interests include the processes of change and growth in relationship, as well as the growing area of interpersonal neurobiology.
Catherine Koverola, Ph.D., Fuller Theological Seminary School of Psychology. Catherine Koverola is Dean of the School of Applied Psychology, Counseling and Family Therapy. Her current area of research is children's mental health and indigenous approaches to wellness in Alaska Native communities using a community based participatory research model.
Pat Linn, Ph.D., University of Kansas. A developmental psychologist and researcher, some of Pat Linn's focuses include the science of learning in cooperative education, infant behavior and development, and the effects of U.S. social policy on immigrant children.
Merryl E. Rothaus, M.A., Naropa University. Merryl Rothaus is a board-certified registered art therapist and licensed mental health counselor. Rothaus maintains a private therapy practice where she blends her transpersonal art therapy training with her post-graduate studies in the Hakomi method of psychotherapy.
Ron Seifert, Ph.D., University of Tennessee. Ron Seifert is a licensed psychologist and a professor of health psychology, with over 30 years of combined clinical, research and teaching experience.
Carol Stanley, Ph.D., Seattle Pacific University. Carol Stanley is a Clinical Member and Approved Supervisor of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (AAMFT) and a member of the International Family Therapy Association (IFTA).
Alex Suarez, Ph.D., University of Washington. She earned her Licenciatura in experimental psychology from the National University of Mexico and is fluent in four languages. A licensed, practicing psychologist for the last twenty years, she has also served as faculty at National University of Mexico, University of Washington and Argosy University.
Liang Tien, Psy.D., University of Denver. L. Tien's treatment focus is with couples, families with adolescent children and women with history of trauma.
Mary Wieneke, Ph.D., California School of Professional Psychology/Alliant International University. She is a clinical psychologist with interests in mind-body-culture integration, trauma, health and the long-term effects of chemotherapy on neurocognitive functioning.
Haiwen Yang, Ph.D., University of Nevada, Reno. Haiwen Yang is a national certified counselor who specializes in cross-cultural counseling and forming a cultural identity development model for international students.
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