Clinton W. McLemore explained

Clinton W. McLemore
Nationality:American
Education:Admiral Farragut Academy
Adelphi University (BA)
University of Southern California (PhD)

Clinton W. McLemore is an American psychologist and author.[1]

Education

For high school, McLemore attended Admiral Farragut Academy.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: McLemore, Clinton W. . worldcat.org . November 24, 2016.
  2. https://dornsife.usc.edu/assets/sites/1/docs/news_events/2010/03/Winter2004.pdf., p. 20
  3. McLemore, Clinton W. "Applications of Balance Theory to Family Relations." Journal of Counseling Psychology 20.2 (1973): 181-84. (see author affiliation note)
  4. Brokaw, David W., and Clinton W. McLemore. "Toward a More Rigorous Definition of Social Reinforcement: Some Interpersonal Clarifications." Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 44.5 (1983): 1014-020. (see author affiliation note)
  5. http://www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/1978/JASA3-78MCLemore.html (see author affiliation header)
  6. Deangelis, Tori. "APA Briefly: APA Acquires Digest." PsycEXTRA Dataset.
  7. http://www.indiana.edu/~bsl/Papers%20from%20lab/Timberla_1988a.pdf, p. 6
  8. http://www.apa.org/pubs/journals/browse.aspx?query=title:C&type=journal
  9. http://www.abc-clio.com/ABC-CLIOCorporate/product.aspx?pc=A4551C (see information tabs)
  10. Daft, Richard L. The New Era of Management. Mason, OH: Thomson/South-Western, 2006. p. 169
  11. Web site: Award for Outstanding Contributions to Continuing Professional Development in Psychology . American Psychological Association (APA).
  12. McLemore, C.W., & Hart, P.P. “Relational Psychotherapy: The Clinical Facilitation of Intimacy,” in Anchin, Jack C., and Donald J. Kiesler. Handbook of Interpersonal Psychotherapy. New York: Pergamon, 1982.
  13. Brokaw, D.W. & McLemore, C.W., “Interpersonal Models of Personality and Psychopathology,” in Gilbert, David G., and James J. Connolly. Personality, Social Skills, and Psychopathology: An Individual Differences Approach. New York: Plenum, 1991. p. 49
  14. McLemore, Clinton W. "Factorial Validity of Imagery Measures." Behaviour Research and Therapy 14.6 (1976): 399-408.
  15. McLemore, Clinton W. "Imagery in Desensitization." Behaviour Research and Therapy 10.1 (1972): 51-57.
  16. Davis, Daniel, Clinton W. McLemore, and Perry London. "The Role of Visual Imagery in Desensitization." Behaviour Research and Therapy 8.1 (1970): 11-13.
  17. McLemore, Clinton W., and John H. Court. "Religion and Psychotherapy: Ethics, Civil Liberties, and Clinical Savvy: A Critique." Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 45.6 (1977): 1172-175.
  18. McLemore, Clinton W. "Applications of Balance Theory to Family Relations." Journal of Counseling Psychology 20.2 (1973): 181-84.
  19. Brokaw, David W., and Clinton W. McLemore. "Toward a More Rigorous Definition of Social Reinforcement: Some Interpersonal Clarifications." Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 44.5 (1983): 1014-020.
  20. McLemore, Clinton W., and David W. Brokaw. "Personality Disorders as Dysfunctional Interpersonal Behavior." Journal of Personality Disorders 1.3 (1987): 270-85.
  21. McLemore, Clinton W., and John W. Fantuzzo. "CARE: Bridging the Gap between Clinicians and Computers." Professional Psychology 13.4 (1982): 501-10.
  22. Rudy, John P., Clinton W. McLemore, and Richard L. Gorsuch. "Interpersonal Behavior and Therapeutic Progress: Therapists and Clients Rate Themselves and Each Other." Psychiatry 48.3 (1985): 264-81.
  23. McLemore, Clinton W. “Teaching Students to Think.” The Clinical Psychologist (1984).
  24. McLemore, Clinton W., and Lorna S. Benjamin. "Whatever Happened to Interpersonal Diagnosis? A Psychosocial Alternative to DSM-III." American Psychologist 34.1 (1979): 17-34.
  25. Web site: Staying One.
  26. Book: Inspiring trust: Strategies for effective leadership. 2014017831. 9781440833571. 2014. Praeger, An Imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC.
  27. Book: Toxic relationships and how to change them: Health and holiness in everyday life. 2003008454. 9780787968779. 2003. Jossey-Bass.
  28. Book: Street-smart ethics: Succeeding in business without selling your soul. 2002028890. 9780664226282. 2003. Westminster John Knox Press.
  29. Book: Honest Christianity. 84010450. 9780664260095. 1984. Westminster Press.
  30. Book: Good guys finish first: Success strategies from the book of Proverbs for business men and women. 83014708. 9780664260040. 1983. Westminster Press.
  31. Book: The scandal of psychotherapy: A guide to resolving the tensions between faith and counseling. 81084288. 1982. Tyndale House Publishers.
  32. Book: Clergyman's psychological handbook: Clinical information for pastoral counseling. 74002011. 9780802815767. 1974. Eerdmans.
  33. https://www.farragut.org/vic-saitta-63n-memorial-scholarship-fund/ . He received his B.A. from Adelphi University in Garden City, New York [citation: http://www.e-yearbook.com/yearbooks/Adelphi_University_Oracle_Yearbook/1965/Page_285.html</ref> He earned his Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from the [[University of Southern California]].[2]

    Career

    McLemore began his teaching career at Mount St. Mary's College,[3] after which he joined the faculty of the Graduate School of Psychology at Fuller Theological Seminary, where he taught for ten years.[4] [5]

    In 1983, he founded Clinician's Research Digest. It was later acquired and is now operated by the American Psychological Association, which also runs a continuing education program based on it.[6] [7] CRD has since been divided into two journals: Clinician’s Research Digest: Adult Populations, and Clinician’s Research Digest: Child and Adolescent Populations; both continue to be published by the APA.[8]

    In a study funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), McLemore was designated as one of thirty master therapists in the United States. Shortly thereafter, McLemore began working as a management psychologist. He continued this work for over thirty years, and his clients included both Fortune 500 corporations and nonprofit institutions.[9]

    McLemore has reviewed for American Psychologist and Journal of Clinical and Consulting Psychology. In his writing, McLemore's focus is most often on the subjects of interpersonal and organizational dynamics, ethics, pastoral counseling, marriage, philosophy of religion, theology of relationships, and the psychology of effective leadership.[10]

    In 2019, Dr. McLemore was given the American Psychological Association's award for Outstanding Contributions to Continuing Professional Development in Psychology.[11]

    Chapters and articles

    McLemore has written chapters in four books, including Handbook of Interpersonal Psychotherapy[12] and Personality, Social Skills, and Psychopathology.[13]

    He has been the author of over thirty articles, which have appeared in journals such as Behaviour Research & Therapy,[14] [15] [16] Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology,[17] Journal of Counseling Psychology,[18] Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,[19] Journal of Personality Disorders,[20] Professional Psychology,[21] Psychiatry,[22] and The Clinical Psychologist.[23] His longest article to date appeared in the American Psychologist; the piece was also one of the longest published in the American Psychologist’s history up to that point, and was on the subject of interpersonal diagnosis.[24]

    Books

    Staying One: How to Avoid a Make-Believe Marriage (Eugene: Cascade, 2017). Co-authored with Anna M. McLemore.[25]

    Inspiring Trust: Strategies for Effective Leadership (Santa Barbara: Praeger, 2014).[26]

    Toxic Relationships and How to Change Them: Health and Holiness in Everyday Life (San Francisco: Wiley/Jossey-Bass, 2003).[27]

    Street-Smart Ethics: Succeeding in Business without Selling Your Soul (Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2003).[28]

    Honest Christianity: Psychological Strategies for Spiritual Growth (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1984).[29]

    Good Guys Finish First (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1983).[30]

    The Scandal of Psychotherapy: A Guide for Resolving the Tensions between Faith and Counseling (Wheaton: Tyndale House, 1982).[31]

    Clergyman’s Psychological Handbook: Clinical Information for Pastoral Counseling (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1974).[32]

    References