
"Modern Day Slavery" Movie Screening
Jameta N. Barlow, North Carolina State University, co-sponsored the film screening with North Carolina State University’s Women's Center and African American Cultural Center.

Women's Reproductive Health Seminar
Lisa Hoyman& Victoria Wu, Palo Alto University, organized a seminar focused on educating student clinicians on women's reproductive health issues.

Empowerment Feminist Therapy and CBT Workshop
Katy Haynes Owen, University of Kentucky, co-led a two-day workshop for counseling psychology graduate students at the University of Kentucky with Pam Remer, PhD, about integrating empowerment feminist therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy.

“Embodiment(s) in the Therapy Room:
(How) Clients and Therapists Negotiate the Material Body” Day Conference
Jessica Joseph, New School for Social Research, Acknowledging that subjectivities (of both the clients and the therapists) are never disembodied or detached from our physicality, this conference fostered a discussion about how corporeal experiences are perceived by each member of the therapeutic relationship and influence therapeutic process. A diverse group of experts started the conference, speaking on subject matters such as transgender experiences, dis/ability, race and ethnicity, "alternative" sexualities and size/shape diversity. Speakers included Danielle Sheypuk, PhD; Griffin Hansbury, MA, LCSW; and Joanne Clark, LCSW. The second portion of the conference was dedicated to experiential breakout sessions run by the panelists. The day concluded with a discussion of the themes and experiences from the individual breakout sessions. The attendees left with an expanded understanding of their own embodiments, how they interact with their embodied clients as well as a framework for challenging and broadening clinical training and case conceptualizations.
Campus Representative Programs
The Div. 35 campus representatives coordinated exciting programs on their respective campuses. Some were ongoing; others were one-time events. Explore a sampling of events from the 2013-2014 school year.
Putting the Sensual Back in Consensual

Emily Barnum, Ball State University, organized a panel discussing sexual assault. Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners (SANE), the office of student rights, counselors and victim advocates discussed safer sex practices as well as sexual assault information.
"Modern Day Slavery" Movie Screening

Nina Silander, Regent University, invited a law school professor and two members (including director and co-founder) of the Virginia Beach Justice Initiative to offer more information on human trafficking as well as facilitate group discussion after the screening.

Feminist Mythbusting
Noelany Pelc, Texas Woman's University, Students participated in experiential activities of generating terms, words, phrases, stereotypes and images of how feminists are depicted and listened to a panel of five to six individuals who shared about their feminist journey. Panelists answered questions and facilitated discussion. Students received information about what research shows about individuals who are feminists and feminist identity development (e.g., most feminists do not hold "man-hating" views) and processed their reactions to these findings.

Interest Meeting: Setting up a local Association for Women in Psychology chapter
Carlie D. Trott, Colorado State University, established a local/regional Association for Women in Psychology chapter. At its first event, the new members presented recent research/practice, provided food and collaboratively formed a mission statement. By establishing this event, members created a space for feminist psychologists in Colorado to connect and collaborate.
Weekly Reading Group

Samantha Christopher, Texas Tech University, held a feminist reading group two times a month with the aim of graduate students in psychology pulling interesting feminist readings (theory and therapy readings) together to discuss and process. Their reading group met on the first Saturday of the month to allow the opportunity for others to join them. The group collected articles and book chapters in a shared Dropbox and also maintained a Facebook page.