Poverty in America: Integrating Theory, Research, Policy & Practice
One-fifth of all American children live in poverty. Why? And what can be done about it? In this course, we will take an ecological and psychobiological approach to poverty in America and its relationship to public policy, with a focus on child poverty. We will discuss how physical and psychosocial environments differ for poor and nonpoor children and their families in both rural and urban contexts, specifically rural Upstate New York and urban Yonkers. We will explore how these differences affect mental and physical health and motor, cognitive, language, and socioemotional development. We will also discuss individual and environmental protective factors that buffer some children from the adverse effects of poverty, as well as the impacts of public policy on poor children and their families—including recent welfare, health, and educational policy reforms in the United States. Topics will include environmental chaos, cumulative risk and its relationship to chronic stress, and unequal access to health-care services. This course will also serve as an introduction to the methodologies of community-based and participatory action research within the context of a service-learning course. Students will be expected to participate in a community partnership, addressing issues related to poverty, as part of their conference work. In addition, we will discuss the nature of these research and practice methodologies, and students will develop a proposal for community-based work in partnership with their community organization. A previous course in the social sciences is recommended.
Psychology courses
- Art & Visual Perception
- Beyond the Matrix of Race: Psychologies of Race and Ethnicity
- Bullies and Their Victims: Social and Physical Aggression in Childhood and Adolescence
- Child and Adolescent Development
- Children’s Health in a Multicultural Context
- First-Year Studies: Approaches to Child Development
- First-Year Studies: The Realities of Groups
- Home and Other Figments: Qualitative Approaches to Exile and Immigration
- Language Development
- Language Research Seminar
- Life and Work: Biography, Autobiography, and Memoir in Psychology
- Pathways of Development: Psychopathology and Other Challenges to the Developmental Process
- Personality Development
- Play: Psychological and Anthropological Perspectives
- Poverty in America: Integrating Theory, Research, Policy & Practice
- Rainbow Nation: Growing Up South African in the Apartheid and Post-Apartheid Eras
- Social Development
- Structure and Change in Life Historical Accounts
- Studying Men and Masculinities
- The Final Solution: Psychological Perspectives on Inhumanity
- The Historical Evolution of Psychological Thought
- Theories of Development
- The Talking Cure: The Restoration of Freedom

