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Counseling and Psychotherapy


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at Florida State University, and in 2016, he received the Locke/Paisley Mentorship award from the Association for Counselor Education and Supervision (ACES). In 2018, he received the Mary Smith Arnold Anti-Oppression Award from the Counselors for Social Justice, a division of ACA, as well as the U.S. President’s Lifetime Achievement Award. He was the 2019 recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award from ACES.

      One of Dr. Capuzzi’s most recent contributions to the profession was a webinar series titled Leading Lights in Counseling developed for Walden University in 2021. This series featured prominent scholars and practitioners who addressed pertinent issues and topics that impact the role of the counselor and other helping professionals.

      Mark D. Stauffer, PhD, NCC, is a core faculty member in the clinical mental health counseling program at Walden University. He specialized in couples, marriage, and family counseling during his graduate work in the counselor education program at Portland State University, where he received his master’s degree. He received his doctoral degree from Oregon State University, Department of Teacher and Counselor Education.

      Dr. Stauffer is the past president of the Association for Humanistic Counseling (AHC) and past cochair of the ACA International Committee, and he recently served on ACA’s Climate Change Task Force. He was a Chi Sigma Iota International Fellow and was awarded ACA’s Emerging Leaders Grant and the AHC Humanistic Leadership and Past President’s awards.

      As a clinician, Dr. Stauffer has worked in crisis centers and other nonprofit organizations working with low-income individuals, couples, and families in the Portland metropolitan area in Oregon. Along with an existential-humanistic and systems theoretical orientation, he has studied and trained in the Zen tradition for 25 years and presents locally and nationally on meditation as well as mindfulness-based therapies in counseling. He also leads nature-connection community mentoring programs for youth. His current research projects focus on climate change and mental health as well as antiracism in counselor education.

      In addition to Counseling and Psychotherapy: Theories and Interventions (2016), he has copublished with Dr. Capuzzi Foundations of Couples, Marriage, and Family Counseling (2015, 2021); Foundations of Addictions Counseling (2008, 2012, 2016, 2020); Foundations of Group Counseling (2019); Career Counseling: Foundations, Perspectives, and Applications (2006, 2012, 2019); and Human Growth and Development Across the Life Span: Applications for Counselors (2016).

      Meet the Contributors

      Talana Butler is a second-year student in the master’s counseling program at Xavier University of Louisiana, where she serves as coordinator of the university’s Center for Traumatic Stress Research, working under the direction of Dr. Cirecie West-Olatunji. Ms. Butler’s research interests focus on clinical interventions for adjudicated youth. She is a graduate of the psychology program at Southern University (Baton Rouge, LA).

      Julia Champe, PhD, core faculty at Walden University, teaches counseling theory, practicum, and research coursework in the clinical mental health and counselor education and supervision programs. A former co-owner of a rural private practice specializing in low-cost couple and family counseling, Dr. Champe has taught in counselor education programs in Wisconsin and Illinois. An avid group worker, Dr. Champe has written several articles on group work theory and practice and taught group work across the United States and in Japan. She currently serves as chair of the Product Development Committee for the Association for Specialists in Group Work and as an editorial reviewer for The Journal for Specialists in Group Work. She has cowritten extensively on counselor education and diversity, cultural competence, and inter-cultural communication. Dr. Champe’s additional areas of scholarly interest include supervision, counselor development, sexuality, multicultural issues, and qualitative research.

      Lauren B. Clark, MS, LPC, NCC, is a current doctoral candidate in the counselor education program at the University of New Orleans. She serves as Doctoral Member-at-Large for Chi Sigma Iota-Alpha Eta chapter at the University of New Orleans and has published the journal article, “Utilizing Mindfulness Based CBT to Address Anger and Aggression in Middle Schools.”

      Tatiana Cruz, MS, LMHC, is a licensed mental health counselor in New York state and current doctoral student at the University of Texas at San Antonio studying counselor education and supervision. She received her master’s degree in clinical mental health counseling at Canisius College in Buffalo, New York.

      Thelma Duffey, PhD, is professor and chair in the Department of Counseling at the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) and past president of the American Counseling Association (ACA). An ACA Fellow, Dr. Duffey was a longtime member of the ACA Governing Council and a two-term ACA treasurer. Dr. Duffey was the founding president of the Association for Creativity in Counseling, a division within ACA, and she is editor of the Journal of Creativity in Mental Health. Dr. Duffey has received numerous leadership and research awards from professional organizations, including ACA, the Association for Counselor Education and Supervision (ACES), the Southern Association for Counselor Education and Supervision, the Texas Counseling Association, the Texas Association for Counselor Education and Supervision, and the Association for Assessment and Research in Counseling. The Association for Creativity in Counseling established an award in her name. Dr. Duffey has over 60 peer-reviewed publications and four edited and coedited books. Her research interests include relational-cultural theory, developmental relational counseling, creativity in counseling, crisis and trauma counseling, and strengths-based leadership. She is currently spearheading a leadership academy initiative for faculty and doctoral students within her college. Dr. Duffey provided support and consultation in the Newtown, Connecticut, community following the shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School and co-led efforts to provide crisis and trauma services to Sutherland Springs, Texas, and neighboring communities after the church shooting in 2017. Dr. Duffey codirects the Academy for Crisis and Trauma Counseling within the Department of Counseling at UTSA. During her tenure as ACA president, Dr. Duffey led a national antibullying and interpersonal violence initiative, and she currently leads efforts within the UTSA Department of Counseling to support the works of the David’s Legacy Foundation.

      Cass Dykeman, PhD, is a professor of counseling at Oregon State University. He is the author of two books, 33 book chapters, and 46 peer-reviewed articles. His expertise includes the use of corpus linguistics, Bayesian statistics, and artificial intelligence in counseling research. Prior to working in higher education, he was an elementary and high school counselor in Seattle, Washington. Dr. Dykeman is past president of both the Washington State Association for Counselor Education and Supervision and the Western Association for Counselor Education and Supervision. His current research focus is on the use of natural language processing with counseling transcripts.