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Department of Psychology
University of Mississippi

UM Offers New Multidisciplinary Disaster Sciences Minor

From dealing with wildfires to hurricanes, program aims to prepare students to help others

NOVEMBER 21, 2018 BY KENDALL PATTERSON

Students enrolled in the UM Disaster Sciences minor program meet with Stefan Schulenberg (center), professor of psychology and director of the Clinical-Disaster Research Center. The students are (from left) Courtney Pomfrey, Mikaela Raley, Sunny Patel, Calli Holland, Emily Gawlik and Phoebe Lavin. All the students except Raley, a first-year graduate student, are undergraduate student research assistants.

Students enrolled in the UM Disaster Sciences minor program meet with Stefan Schulenberg (center), professor of psychology and director of the Clinical-Disaster Research Center. The students are (from left) Courtney Pomfrey, Mikaela Raley, Sunny Patel, Calli Holland, Emily Gawlik and Phoebe Lavin. All the students except Raley, a first-year graduate student, are undergraduate student research assistants. Photo by Ashley Polk

The University of Mississippi College of Liberal Arts is offering a minor designed to help others in times of need following natural disasters.

Stefan Schulenberg

Stefan Schulenberg

UM launched its Disaster Sciences minor program this fall, and 14 students are enrolled.

Disaster Sciences is an 18-hour multidisciplinary minor designed to educate students on managing or helping others manage their lives before, during or after disasters through a variety of disciplines, including social work, psychology, sociology, criminal justice, geology and nutrition.

While the university already offered the courses that are a part of the new minor, they weren’t interconnected.

“To me, it’s just the perfect combination,” said Courtney Pomfrey, a senior psychology major from Cincinnati and one of the first students to enroll in the new program. “You have a wide range of courses, and it’s interesting how they all correlate and intertwine with each other.”

Stefan Schulenberg, professor of psychology and director of the Clinical-Disaster Research Center, is the faculty leader bringing the minor to UM.

Schulenberg said his goal was to gather together a variety of courses that benefit one another.

“It just seemed like an opportunity to bring existing research programs and educational programs together,” he said. “Some of the courses and disciplines you won’t even think about in connection to disaster sciences.

“That’s the exciting thing about having so many disciplines. Everybody brings their own perspective to it.”

The different courses will give students knowledge of how to prepare for and deal with any natural disasters, such as wildfires and hurricanes, and human-caused disasters, such as technological and terrorist attacks and shootings.

Among the requirements to complete the minor are that students complete a minimum of one course from the Foundations of Human Behavior, Applications and Contexts category, and complete a course from the Working with Diversity category. At least three different disciplines outside the student’s major must be represented among the courses completed.

Schulenberg said he believes the lives of many Mississippians will benefit as a result of those who obtain this minor because the region tends to experience so many disasters.

This frequency of disasters made Schulenberg realize that UM should create a Disaster Sciences minor.

When he was earning his master’s and doctoral degrees in clinical psychology about 20 years ago at the University of South Dakota, it was the only university offering a specialization in disaster mental health. The program was so new that when he graduated, he was noted for being the first student in the country to graduate with a Ph.D. in clinical psychology with a disaster mental health specialization.

The experience of taking some of those courses, along with the occurrences of great disasters in the world such as Hurricane Katrina and the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, convinced him to propose this new minor.

Additionally, he said he found that while most people want to help in the wake of a tragic situation, most don’t know what to do or how to effectively handle such situations.

“This minor will give them the level of education needed to make a difference and help others,” Schulenberg said. “We hope to help them in that process.”

The minor offers opportunities to have Mississippi Emergency Management Agency officials, American Red Cross officials and other leaders in the field of disaster management to come to campus and interact with students interested in similar fields. It also provides opportunities to offer training in psychological first aid.

Multidisciplinary minors such as this one are expected to be attractive and useful to more students, said Donald Dyer, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts.

“We’d love to see students in increasing numbers take advantage of these kinds of minors,” Dyer said. “I think it broadens their perspectives and sometimes really becomes something to complement their degree.”

For a complete description of the minor and course requirements, visit https://catalog.olemiss.edu/liberal-arts/ba-distr-sci.