SDSU
Psychology Professor Jerome Sattler
To Receive Life Achievement Award
CONTACT: Aaron Hoskins
SDSU Marketing & Communications
Phone (619) 594-1119
ahoskins@mail.sdsu.edu
SAN DIEGO, Thursday, March
10, 2005 Jerome Sattler, professor emeritus of psychology
and author of benchmark psychology textbooks, will be honored by
the American Psychological Association's Foundation with its 2005
Gold Medal Award for life achievement in the application of psychology.
The Gold Medal recognizes a distinguished
career and enduring contribution to advancing the application of
psychology through methods, research and/or application of psychological
techniques to important practical problems. The award is open
to psychologists in all fields.
Sattler, 74, has made significant contributions
to the application of psychological measurement to the assessment
of children and adolescents. In addition, he has been instrumental
in educating a legion of applied and research psychologists.
Sattler will receive the award at the American
Psychological Associations national meeting August 19, in
Washington, D.C. The SDSU Department of Psychology will also recognize
Sattler at its March 19 gala celebrating the departments 60th
anniversary.
Sattler is nationally known for his Assessment
of Children, four editions of which have sold more than 250,000
copies, and all editions have been translated into Spanish. It was
one of the first textbooks to integrate assessment theory, literature,
techniques and applications to special populations, and is often
referred to as the bible of assessment.
There was a great need for a book that could
help students learn how to administer, score, interpret and write
psychological reports, and to develop intervention strategies to
treat children with psychological disorders, Sattler said.
Sattler said psychologists play an integral role
addressing many of societys most distressing problems, especially
issues facing children.
There are so many areas of need, from increases
in child abuse to high teen-pregnancy rates to delinquency,
Sattler said. Psychologists play a role in reducing those
and many other problems. But we can do much more.
Sattler said research related to how the brain
processes information is the next psychology frontier, which could,
among other benefits, play a large role in treating learning disabilities.
We have seen incredible advances in neuropsychology
in recent years, and I expect a greater impact in the future,
he said. Improving brain imaging techniques will better show
which parts of the brain are involved in reading, writing, speaking
and the manner in which people receive and interpret information.
He has also published more than 100 articles and
monographs and provided more than 200 speeches, workshops and symposia
in the fields of clinical and school psychology and related areas,
and is a co-author of the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale: Fourth
Edition.
Sattler is board certified in clinical psychology
and a fellow in the American Psychological Association. The APAs
division of school psychology presented him with its senior scientist
award in 1998.
Sattler taught at San Diego State from 1965 until
his retirement in August 1994. Recently, he established an endowment
fund for the support of Interlibrary Loan document delivery services
and the psychology collections.
For more information about the SDSU Department
of Psychology 60th Anniversary gala, visit http://sdsumonth.com
or contact Lorah Bodie-Austin at laustin@mail.sdsu.edu or (619)
594-0193.
San Diego State University
is the oldest and largest higher education institution in the San
Diego region. Since it was founded in 1897, the university has grown
to offer bachelors degrees in 81 areas, masters degrees
in 72 areas and doctorates in 16 areas. SDSUs nearly 33,000
students participate in an academic curriculum distinguished by
direct contact with faculty and an increasing international emphasis
that prepares them for a global future. For more information, visit
www.sdsu.edu.
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