Celiane Rey-Casserly, Ph.D.
Children's Hospital, Neuropsychology Program
300 Longwood Avenue
Boston, MA 02115Telephone: 617-355-6708
FAX: 617- 730-0319
E-mail: celiane.rey-casserly@childrens.harvard.eduInformation about Children's Hospital: http://www.childrenshospital.org
Information about neuropsychology residency at Children's Hospital, Boston:
http://childrenshospital.org/clinicalservices/Site1893/mainpageS1893P25.html
Interviews will be scheduled at INS in Boston in February 2011 or in Boston prior to INS for competitive candidates. Teleconference interviews can also be arranged.
2012 application deadline: January 11, 2012, early application encouraged
2012 residency start date: September 1, 2012Clinical neuropsychology residency openings for 2012: 1
Clinical neuropsychology residency positions: 3Residency/fellowship positions in psychology: 14 postdoctoral; 6 predoctoral fellows
- Clinical neuropsychologists: 8 Full-time; 1 part-time; 1 consultant
- With ABCN/ABPP: 1 Full-time; 0 part-time; 0 consultants
- Other psychologists: 10 Full-time; 9 part-time; 7 consultants
- With ABPP: 3 Full-time; 0 part-time; 1 consultant
Graduate training of residency applicants:
Preferred: clinical psychology, neuropsychology track or emphasis
Accepted: counseling psychology, school psychologyPrimary emphasis: Pediatric
Emphases of training opportunities:
Strong: : neuropsychological assessment and consultation, clinical research, developmental approach; supervision (by resident of other providers); neuro-oncology, epilepsy (including pre/post surgical evaluation), traumatic brain injury consultation and follow-up, genetic disorders, neurosurgical populations; wide range of pediatric neurological and medical disorders, multidisciplinary care
Moderate: psychotherapy
Weak: neuropsychological rehabilitation, forensics, geriatrics
Availability of patient populations:
Strong: ADHD/learning disabilities, epilepsy, brain tumor, toxic exposure, childhood leukemia, genetic disorders, neurosurgical populations, HIV/AIDS & infectious disease, racial/ethnic minorities (African American, Latino), traumatic brain injury, multiple sclerosis
Moderate: adult stroke, psychiatric
Weak: dementia, parkinsons, and geriatric conditions
Participating Programs
Retrograde
Anterograde
updated 10-12-11