The Psychology Clinic is a non-profit clinic that serves as a supervised training facility for advanced Ph.D.-level student clinicians. Every trainee is supervised by a licensed psychologist, and all of our clients receive the benefits of a licensed psychologist's supervisory expertise and oversight. Because we are a non-profit training clinic, we can provide clients with professional, confidential psychological services based on a reduced - cost sliding scale. We work with each client individually to determine affordable rates for our services.
Mission
The mission of the Clinic is threefold: Professional and Evidence-Based Training, Scientific Research and Community Service. Professional, competent training in clinical services and research is offered to graduate students in the applied programs of the Department of Psychology. Psychology Clinic services focus on preventative care, comprehensive psychological evaluation, and therapeutic intervention. The University of North Texas Psychology Clinic strives to provide a wide range of contemporary and empirically validated therapeutic intervention strategies and psychological testing measures to meet the needs of each individual client.
Who Provides Services
The Clinic staff is comprised of teams of licensed psychologists and doctoral-level psychology students who provide therapy and psychological testing to adults, adolescents, children, couples and families.
The doctoral-level trainees are students in the APA-accredited Clinical Psychology and Counseling Psychology programs at The University of North Texas. We strive to provide professional, confidential services and referrals to every client.
Who We Serve
Who We Serve: The UNT Psychology Clinic can provide in-person and telehealth services to anyone located within the State of Texas.
In accordance with APA guidelines for multiculturalism,[1] we adhere to the highest standards of professionalism, respect, and multicultural competence. In the clinic, our faculty, student-clinicians, and staff members honor, value, and appreciate diversity from all members of the community. We strive to provide quality services that are sensitive to all types of cultural and individual differences, including: age, race/ethnicity, sex, gender identity, nationality, socioeconomic status, military background, religious affiliation, sexual orientation, disability, and other valued components of diversity. We work to create an environment which promotes awareness and acceptance of unique individual differences, and we strive to provide culturally relevant and appropriate services in accordance to each client's personal preferences and needs.
[1] Multicultural guidelines: An ecological approach to context, identity, and intersectionality. (2017). American Psychological Association. Retrieved from: http://www.apa.org/about/policy/multicultural-guidelines.pdf