| Why
Should a Qualified
Psychologist Attain Specialty
Certification?
The
practice of American Psychology has become increasingly complex and competitive.
There has been a decided trend toward practice focused in delimited areas
with a number of such areas emerging as specialties. The ABPP establishes
and continually incorporates the current developments in the definition
and requirements of specialties in professional psychology. Over the past
decade 10 new specialties have joined 3 traditional specialties which
have been in the field for the past 55 years. The new specialties have
emerged through public needs and professional advancements.
The
public is not expected to be knowledgeable about specialty requirements
such as accredited doctoral programs, internships, or supervised post-doctoral
training.
The
clearest and most responsible way for a psychologist to represent herself/himself
to the public, third-parties, and the profession as a specialist is to
be certified through an organized peer process as meeting the standards
and demonstrating the competencies required in the specialty. ABPP is
the only non-profit professional unitary organization with multiple specialty
board quality controls recognized by the profession as certifying specialty
practitioners in psychology.
Some of the rewards of specialty board certification include:
- The
attainment of an independent, rigorous verification that the standards
and competencies required in a specialty area of psychology have been
met.
- Holding
an increasingly valuable credential, in the context of increasing
specialty practice, which is recognized by universities, hospitals,
health service systems, agencies, and the public.
- Listing
as a Board Certified Specialist in the on-line Directory and in a
number of ABPP Academy Directories available as a guide to the public,
third parties, and colleagues.
- Supporting
qualification as an expert witness.
- A
Directory of certified specialists with easy, on-line, public
access (by geographic area) to certified specialists in Psychology.
- Verification
as currently maintaining certification requirements of the specialty.
- Listing
specialty board certification as additional recognition in the APA
Membership directory and the National Register of Health Service Providers
in Psychology.
-
Membership as a Fellow in the Academy of the specialty. The newly
organizing Academies provide professional fellowship, continuing education,
advocacy activities, recruitment, improving quality and accessibility
of services in the specialty, participation in Specialty Board examination
and the election of Specialty Board members.
- Receipt
of and opportunity to publish in The ABPP Specialist, the official
newsletter of the ABPP.
- Invitation
to attend and participate in the ABPP’s National Convocation
held during the APA National Convention.
- Recognition
by most licensing jurisdictions of ABPP Board Certification as an endorsement
for reciprocity of licensure.
- Increasing
recognition by employers such as the US Public Health Service and
the US Department of Defense for salary bonus benefits.
- Qualification
for significant reduction of liability practice insurance by American
Professional Agency.
- An
opportunity to support and participate in the advancement of the specialty
practice of psychology at the local, state, and national levels through
the governance of the ABPP and the Academies.
- Most
fundamentally, to meet the standard of a responsible profession that
when offering specialty services to the public the professional psychologists
offering such services should be certified in that specialty by the
profession.
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