Header image

Perth Pathways towards endorsement (Panel)

Thursday, August 29, 2024
5:00 PM - 5:45 PM
Perth | Mecure hotel

Details

Hear from psychologists about career opportunities in endorsed areas.


Speaker

Agenda Item Image
Ms Charlotte Bowyer
Clinical Psychologist/Clinical Neuropsychologist
Bowyer Psychology

PERTH | Pathways towards endorsement (Panel)

Biography

I have been endorsed as a Clinical Psychologist since 1998 and a Clinical Neuropsychologist since 2005. I have held senior positions within hospitals, across both inpatient and outpatient settings in Perth and the UK. Since 2007, I have been in private practice at Bowyer Psychology, with a team of Clinical Neuropsychologists and Clinical Psychologists and have a case load of clinical therapy, neuropsychological assessments and medico-legal work. Outside my clinical work, I provide supervision and consultancy to registrars and clinicians and serve as the Treasurer of the WA College of Clinical Neuropsychology.
Agenda Item Image
Associate Professor Trevor Mazzucchelli
Coordinator, Master of Psychology (Professional)
Curtin University

PERTH | Pathways towards endorsement (Panel)

Biography

Trevor Mazzucchelli is an Associate Professor in Clinical Psychology and coordinator of the Master of Psychology (Professional) at Curtin University. Over the past 25 years, he has held several clinical positions, conducted research in the area of parenting children with disability, and written many articles on this and related topics for scientific journals and publications. He is a co-author of Stepping Stones Triple P, has developed programs to help parents of children with disability prevent and manage commonly encountered behavioural and emotional problems, and trained practitioners in more than 10 countries to support parents in using these programs. His research interests are broad and include treatment outcome evaluations, mechanisms of behavioural and cognitive change, self-management, and how individuals and families can achieve optimal levels of functioning under both stressful and normal circumstances.
Agenda Item Image
Courtenay McGill
Senior Consultant
People Solutions

Perth Pathways towards endorsement (Panel)

Biography

Courtenay is an Organisational Psychology Registrar with experience working across the private, public, and volunteer sectors. She is currently a Senior Consultant and Research & Development Team Lead at People Solutions, where she assists organisations in creating better outcomes across the employee lifespan, from recruitment and selection, through creating healthy, engaged, and high performing workforces, through to supporting employees who have been impacted by redundancy and redeployment. Courtenay works with clients across a diverse range of industries on projects spanning psychometric assessment, diversity & inclusion, culture & engagement, training, team effectiveness, leadership, workplace wellbeing, and safety.
Agenda Item Image
Professor Charles Young
Professor of psychology at Murdoch University
Murdoch University

PERTH | Pathways towards endorsement (Panel)

Biography

Charles Young is a Counselling and Clinical Psychologist, Professor of Psychology, and Academic Chair of the Postgraduate Courses in Professional and Clinical Psychology at Murdoch University in Perth, Australia. Previously, he served as Professor and Head of the Department of Psychology at Rhodes University in Grahamstown, South Africa, where he was elected Head of Department for two terms from 2016 to 2021, a period marked by significant growth in student numbers. In 2015, and again in 2020, he was appointed by the Minister of Health to the Professional Board for Psychology of the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA), and in 2020, he was elected as Vice-Chair of the Board. Before joining the academic department at Rhodes University, he led the University Counselling Service from 2007 to 2008. Prior to that, he spent five years with the NHS at Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge, United Kingdom, a leading cognitive therapy centre, where he played a key role in developing low-intensity, brief cognitive therapy interventions for common mental disorders.
loading