An individual applying for licensure as a clinical
psychologist pursuant to the Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act [225 ILCS 15]
(the Act) shall meet the following educational/experience requirements of
subsection (a), (b) or (c).
a) In
accordance with Section 10(3)(a) of the Act, the individual shall be
a
graduate of a doctoral program in clinical, school or counseling psychology
accredited by the American Psychological Association or approved by the
National Register of Health Service Psychologists and shall complete 2 years of
supervised clinical, school or counseling psychology experience in
accordance with Section
1400.110(a) and
(d),
one of which shall be an
internship and one of which shall be postdoctoral. (Section 10(3)(a)
of the Act)
b) In accordance with
Section 10(3)(b) of the Act, the individual
shall be a graduate of a
doctoral program that is equivalent to a clinical, school or counseling
psychology program and shall complete 2 years of supervised clinical, school or
counseling psychology experience in accordance with Section
1400.110(a) and
(d),
one of which shall be an
internship and one of which shall be postdoctoral.
1) In determining equivalent programs, the
following minimum standards shall be met:
A)
The program is from a regionally accredited university, college or
school;
B) The program
constitutes the university's, college's or school's clinical, school or
counseling psychology program as certified by the dean of the institution and
includes a practicum as defined in Section
1400.110(b).
(If there is an additional clinical, school or counseling program that exists
under the clinical, school or counseling psychology name, the applicant shall
apply under Section 10(3) of the Act and subsection (c) of this
Section.);
C) The program, wherever
administratively housed, must be clearly identified and labeled as a psychology
program. The program must specify in institutional catalogues and brochures its
intent to educate and train psychologists;
D) The program is an organizational entity
within the institution;
E) The
program has an integrated, organized sequence of study;
F) The program has an identifiable core
psychology faculty on site and a psychologist responsible for the
program;
G) The program has an
identifiable body of students who are matriculated in that program for a
degree;
H) The program encompasses
a minimum of three academic years of full-time graduate study;
I) The program has a one-year residence.
Residence requires interaction with psychology faculty and other matriculated
psychology students. One year's residence or its equivalent is defined as
follows:
i) 30 semester hours taken on a
full-time or part-time basis at the institution, accumulated within 24 months;
or
ii) A minimum of 350 hours of
student-faculty contact involving face-to-face individual or group courses or
seminars accumulated within 18 months. The educational meetings must include
both faculty-student and student-student interaction, be conducted by the
psychology faculty of the institution at least 90% of the time, be fully
documented by the institution, and relate substantially to the program and
course content. The institution must clearly document how the applicant's
performance is assessed and evaluated.
2) The applicant's program shall include the
following seven core content areas:
A)
Scientific and professional ethics in psychology, which
include the standards set forth in Section
1400.50(k);
B)
Biological basis of
behavior such as physiological psychology, comparative psychology,
neuropsychology, sensation and perception, psychopharmacology;
C)
Cognitive-affective basis of
behavior such as learning, thinking, motivation, emotion;
D)
Social basis of behavior
such as social psychology, group processes, organizational and systems
theory;
E)
Individual
differences that include instruction in theories of normal and
abnormal personality functioning;
F)
Assessment that includes
instruction in clinical interviewing and the administration, scoring and
interpretation of psychological test batteries for the diagnosis of mental
abilities and personality functioning;
G)
Treatment modalities that
include instruction in the theory and application of a diverse range of
psychological interventions for the treatment of mental, emotional, behavioral
or nervous disorders. (Section 10(3)(b) of the Act)
c) In accordance with Section
10(3) of the Act, the individual
shall be a graduate of a doctoral
psychology program or a graduate of a doctoral program that is psychological in
nature; complete a course in each of the seven
core content
areas listed in subsection (b)(2)
; complete a
practicum in accordance with Section
1400.110(a) and
(b);
complete an internship or
equivalent supervised clinical experience in accordance with Section
1400.110(a) and
(c); and
complete two
years of supervised clinical psychology experience in
accordance with Section
1400.110(a) and
(d),
one of which must be
postdoctoral. (Section 10(3)(c) of the Act)
1) The applicant's doctoral program shall
meet the following requirements:
A) The
program is accredited by the Association of State and Provincial Psychology
Boards or the National Register of Health Service Psychologists and is not a
designated clinical or counseling psychology program; or
B) The program is psychological in nature as
determined by the Division upon the recommendation of the Board. In determining
what program is psychological in nature, the Board shall consider:
i) A program that is from a regionally
accredited institution of higher education;
ii) A program, wherever administratively
housed, that is clearly identified and labeled as offering psychology programs.
The program must specify in institutional catalogues and brochures its intent
to educate and train psychologists;
iii) A program that is an organizational
entity within the institution;
iv)
A program that has an integrated, organized sequence of study;
v) A program that has an identifiable core
psychology faculty on site and a psychologist responsible for the
program;
vi) A program that has an
identifiable body of students who are matriculated in that program for a
degree;
vii) A program that
encompasses a minimum of three academic years of full-time graduate
study;
viii) A program that has a
one-year residence. Residence requires interaction with psychology faculty and
other matriculated psychology students. One year's residence or its equivalent
is defined as follows:
* 30 semester hours taken on a full-time or part-time basis
at the institution accumulated within 24 months; or
* A minimum of 350 hours of student-faculty contact involving
face-to-face individual or group courses or seminars accumulated within 18
months. The educational meetings must include both faculty-student and
student-student interaction, be conducted by the psychology faculty of the
institution at least 90% of the time, be fully documented by the institution,
and relate substantially to the program and course content. The institution
must clearly document how the applicant's performance is assessed and
evaluated.
2) The applicant shall complete a course in
each of the following seven core content areas:
A)
Scientific and professional ethics
in psychology set forth in Section
1400.50(k);
B)
Biological basis of
behavior such as physiological psychology, comparative psychology,
neuropsychology, sensation and perception, and psychopharmacology;
C)
Cognitive-affective basis of
behavior such as learning, thinking, motivation, and
emotion;
D)
Social basis of
behavior such as social psychology, group processes, organizational
and systems theory;
E)
Individual differences that include instruction in theories of
normal and abnormal personality functioning;
F)
Assessment that includes
instruction in clinical interviewing and the administration, scoring and
interpretation of psychological test batteries for the diagnosis of mental
abilities and personality functioning;
G)
Treatment modalities that
include instruction in the theory and application of a diverse range of
psychological interventions for the treatment of mental, emotional, behavioral
or nervous disorders. (Section 10(3)(b) of the Act)
d) For the purposes of this
Section, course shall be defined as an integrated, organized didactic sequence
of study that encompasses a minimum of one school term. No independent study
courses may be used to satisfy the seven core content areas set forth in
Section 10(3)(b) of the Act and subsections (b)(2) and (c)(2) of this
Section.
e) Remediation of
Deficiencies
1) Individuals who are deficient
in any of the seven core content areas may complete any one or all of these
courses in a clinical, school or counseling psychological program accredited by
the American Psychological Association, approved by the National Register of
Health Service Psychologists or a program approved in accordance with
subsection (b).
2) Individuals who
are deficient in the practicum, internship or equivalent supervised clinical
experience, or clinical experience, requirements may obtain this experience in
accordance with the standards set forth in Section
1400.110.
3) The applicant will be required to submit
proof to the Division that he/she has completed such a course and/or the
experience. Documentation shall include, but not be limited to,
curriculum/course syllabus, transcripts, practicum and program materials;
internship handbook/brochures and course materials; and internship training
plan.
4) The deficiencies may be
remediated at any time. Applicants have 3 years from the date of
application to complete the application process. If the process has not been
completed in 3 years, the application shall be denied, the fee shall be
forfeited, and the applicant must reapply and meet the requirements in effect
at the time of reapplication. (Section 10 of the Act)