Cynthia Engel
Senior Lecturer
- MA Existential Phenomenological Psychology from Seattle University, 2014
- BA Psychology, Central Washington University, 2009
- BS Interdisciplinary Studies – Social Science, Central Washington University, 2009
Existential/phenomenological psychotherapy; abnormal psychology, substance abuse, recoverynd resilience; the experience of life transitions; the experience of being “other”; the history of deinstitutionalization; social justice issues within underrepresented groups, Black Lives Matter, gender and LGBTQIA communities; serial killers.
Courses Taught:
- IDS 289 – Introduction to the Major
- IDS 353 - Bedlam to Bellevue – On Being “Mad” in the US from 1960 to Present
- IDS 389 – Academic & Career Exploration
- IDS 489 – Senior Portfolio
- PSY 300 – Research Methods in Psychology
- PSY 310 – Multicultural Psychology and Social Justice
- PSY 346 – Social Psychology
- PSY 415 - Behavioral Medicine and Health Psychology
- PSY 438 – Substance Abuse and Dependence
- PSY 460 – Cognitive Psychology
- PSY 478 – Behavioral Neuroscience
- PSY 483 – Psychology of Gender
Background:
My journey with Central Washington University began as an undergraduate student on the Des Moines campus. I graduated from CWU with a double major, Psychology and Interdisciplinary Studies Social Science, in June of 2009. I returned to Highline Community College to gain certification as a Chemical Dependency Professional. Until Spring 2012, I returned to CWU each quarter to act as a teaching assistant on the Des Moines campus, assisting in core psychology classes. In June 2014, I graduated from Seattle University with a Master's degree in Existential-Phenomenological Psychology. My goal had always been to return to teach at CWU, and I am excited and honored to be here.
My academic and professional passions are reflected in the courses that I teach: Social Psychology, Abnormal Psychology, Substance Abuse and Dependence, Multicultural Psychology and Social Justice, and Bedlam to Bellevue, a new IDS offering that explores the history of the mental health care system and its impact on the individual and society.
In my free time, I love reading. In fiction, I favor Tom Robbins, John Irving, Christopher Moore, and Chuck Palahniuk, in no particular order. For non-fiction, Mary Roach, hands down. I listen to true crime podcasts and am an avid fan of My Favorite Murder. I am still a practicing volunteer therapist and on the Board of Directors with Psychotherapy Cooperative, a non-profit organization that provides low cost psychotherapy to members of our community who do not have access to mental health care. And when I have time off, I take frequent and long road trips to National Parks with my husband and two kiddos; and I haunt thrift shops in the Seattle area.
Contact
Dean Hall 130A