Carol D. Goodheart Explained

Carol D. Goodheart
Nationality:American
Fields:Psychology
Workplaces:American Psychological Association
Rutgers University
Alma Mater:Rutgers University

Carol D. Goodheart is an American psychologist and a past president of the American Psychological Association (APA). Goodheart worked as a nurse before entering psychology. She completed a doctorate in counseling psychology from Rutgers University. While serving as the 2010 APA president, Goodheart supported the Presidential Task Force on Advancing Practice and the Presidential Task Force on Caregivers. Goodheart is in private practice in Princeton, New Jersey.

Biography

Career

Goodheart received a nursing diploma from the St. Luke's Hospital School of Nursing in New York. Between 1961 and 1968, Goodheart worked as a nurse in several states; her practice settings included emergency care, intensive care and two Native American reservations. She received her psychology education at Rutgers University, earning an undergraduate degree in 1972 and a doctor of education in counseling psychology in 1978. She received postdoctoral training from the National Psychological Association for Psychoanalysis.

Goodheart spent several years on the APA Board of Directors and served as the organization's treasurer. She co-chaired the APA Presidential Task Force on the Future of Psychology Practice and chaired the Task Force on Evidence-Based Practice. She has served as a senior adviser to the Advisory Council on Genetics and was president of the APA's largest division (Psychologists in Independent Practice).[1]

Goodheart was elected president of the APA for 2010 and focused on integrating science and practice. She supported two APA task forces during her term in office: the Presidential Task Force on Advancing Practice and the Presidential Task Force on Caregivers.[2] During her presidency, the organization was active in gay rights issues. The Council of Representatives voted that April to move its meeting out of the Manchester Grand Hyatt Hotel after its owner made a donation to the California Proposition 8 campaign.[3] After an August district court ruling struck down Proposition 8, Goodheart said, "The American Psychological Association is gratified that the court agreed that there is no justification for denying marriage equality to same-sex couples."[4]

Goodheart has a counseling psychology private practice in Princeton, New Jersey, where she has a special interest in clients with physical disabilities and medical conditions. Goodheart has helped to found a multispecialty mental health practice and a company that develops materials promoting health and quality of life among women. She has served in multiple graduate faculty roles for Rutgers University.[2]

Honors and awards

Personal

Goodheart and her daughter Leigh Woznick wrote Living with Childhood Cancer: A Practical Guide to Help Families Cope. They wrote the book after Goodheart's granddaughter survived cancer that had been diagnosed at nine months of age.[5]

Selected works

Books

Notes and References

  1. Candidate Response: Carol D. Goodheart, EdD. Monitor on Psychology. June 2008. 39. 6. 80. June 23, 2013. American Psychological Association.
  2. Web site: Carol D. Goodheart, EdD: 2010 APA President. American Psychological Association. June 23, 2013.
  3. APA's Council Votes to Move its Next Meeting out of the Manchester Grand Hyatt. Monitor on Psychology. April 2010. 41. 4. 64. June 23, 2013. American Psychological Association.
  4. Web site: Williams. Ken. Reactions to Judge Vaughn Walker's Historic Ruling. August 4, 2010. San Diego Gay & Lesbian News. June 23, 2013.
  5. https://abcnews.go.com/Health/BroadcastPlus/story?id=1329617#.Uca1zvmTh50 When a Child is Diagnosed: A Psychologist's Advice