Chih-Chin
Chou, Ph.D. Assistant Professor |
William
Downey, Ph.D., CRC Adjunct Assistant Professor Ph.D., University of Arizona Bill Downey is an Adjunct Assistant Professor in Rehabilitation Counseling in the Department of Special Education, Rehabilitation and School Psychology, College of Education, University of Arizona. Dr. Downey began work in counseling and vocational rehabilitation in 1967, and has worked for the state VR agency, Goodwill Industries of Southern Arizona, and in private rehabilitation as a counselor, evaluator, administrator, and as a consultant in forensic vocational rehabilitation. He recently developed and implemented a rehabilitation counseling program at Highlands University in Northern New Mexico, and has also been a rehabilitation counselor educator at the University of North Texas. He has served as a commissioner and examination and research chair for two national credentialing bodies, and currently teaches Medical Aspects of Disability in the Rehabilitation Counseling program, as well as other subjects in the CORE curriculum. He was recently elected for a five-year term on the Foundation for Rehabilitation Education and Research. |
Charlene Kampfe, Ph.D. CRC, NCC
Associate Professor Ph.D., University of Arizona Research: Stress and coping with deafness, Student internships, Coping with aging and transitions, Multicultural education Teaching: Principals of rehabilitation counseling practicum/internship, Professional Problems Dr. Kampfe is a CRC, and NCC, and an NCGC. She has received many local and national awards for her teaching, service, and research. Dr. Kampfe is known for her research and presentations in the field of rehabilitation education and for her pioneer work in the research of the clinical internship of rehabilitation counseling which started in the late 1980s/early 1990s. She is also known for her continuing work regarding rehabilitation and the older population, with her first publication on this topic in 1994. She has focused on the relationship between the needs of older people and the services available from rehabilitation counselors. Dr. Kampfe has a strong history of service to her profession and her community. She has served as president of a professional association, as a board member of several professional associations, and as chair of many local and national committees. |
Susan
Moore, Ph.D., CRC Adjunct Assistant Professor Ph.D., University of Arizona Research: Prevention, Locus-of-control, Empowerment Teaching: Prevention of addiction, Problems of drug abuse, Rehabilitation counseling Susan Fordney Moore, Ph.D., C.R.C., is an adjunct assistant professor in the Rehabilitation Counseling Program. "I teach primarily in the off campus/work study component. As an educator, licensed psychologist, and certified rehabilitation counselor, I have come to believe that processes of learning and behavior change are enhanced by mutual and active participation of those involved. I am interested in new and innovative methods of information exchange that provide opportunities for the ongoing development of personal and social responsibility. For this reason, I particularly enjoy teaching classes in counseling practicum and group processes. Other areas of interest include addiction, public offender rehabilitation, and co-occurring disabilities. I believe strongly in the power of individuals to influence their destinies as well as the responsibility of all citizens to advocate for a climate of true social justice." |
Amos
Sales, Ed.D, CRC, NCC Professor and Rehabilitation Program Director Ed.D., University of Florida Research: Substance abuse issues with individuals with disabilities Teaching: Rehabilitation, Rehabilitation education, Rehabilitation counseling Amos Sales, (Ed.D., University of Florida) is Professor and Head of Rehabilitation Programs in the Department of Special Education, Rehabilitation and School Psychology. He directs four long term training grants supporting state-wide delivery of rehabilitation coursework through videoconferencing and one state-wide in-service training grant. He has taught all rehabilitation-related coursework and currently teaches doctoral and masters level experiential courses in developing counseling skills. He has held numerous leadership positions in national associations and is the Past-President of both the National Rehabilitation Association and the National Council on Rehabilitation Education. He has published on a wide variety of issues in rehabilitation with the majority of this work related to development of programs of rehabilitation service or education delivery and has served as a consultant nationally and internationally in these areas. Since 1986, his research, publication, and service emphasis has been in the area of substance abuse treatment and prevention. This work has resulted since 2000 in four texts, two he has edited and two he has authored. |
Mae
Smith, Ed.D, CRC Associate Professor Ed.D., University of Florida Teaching: Rehabilitation psychology, Gerontology, Rehabilitation counseling and counselor education |
College of Education-DPS · Rehabilitation · P. O. Box 210069, Room 412 · Tucson, AZ 85721 · Tel. 520-621-5164 · Fax 520-621-3821
The Rehabilitation Program at the University of Arizona is funded through several state and federal grants. The program head is Amos P. Sales, Ed.D., CRC (email sales@email.arizona.edu), and his assistant is Liz Piña-Figueroa (email lpina1@email.arizona.edu).
