Ph.D. in Psychology, concentration in Integral Transpersonal Psychology
California Institute of Integral Studies
Key Information
Campus location
San Francisco, USA
Languages
English
Study format
Distance Learning
Duration
4 - 7 years
Pace
Part time
Tuition fees
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Application deadline
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Earliest start date
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Introduction
Transpersonal psychology is transformative psychology of mind and body, and of the individual in felt connection with a diverse, interconnected, and evolving world. The field pays particular attention to mystical, spiritual, and other exceptional human experiences associated with healing and transformation—encounters that disclose a vibrant reality that enfolds our seemingly individual minds.
We offer a whole-person approach to transpersonal psychology that includes learning and research structured to meet the needs and goals of working professionals. This approach includes affiliation with a planned research laboratory; a peer-reviewed journal produced in part by student interns; and senior scholars in the field who are available to guide student research. We are committed to diversity and inclusion, embodied tools for scholarship, and systematic approaches to building transpersonal areas of knowledge. Our program is offered as a part-time course of study, where online learning is supplemented by residential intensives.
Cultivate Meaning and Scholarship
Our doctorate is for professionals who wish to enhance their credentials, cultivate new meaning in their work, deepen their skills, or contribute to shaping their areas of specialization. It is also for entrepreneurially oriented students who wish to gain a breadth of knowledge as a foundation for teaching, consulting, or working with individuals. Students will typically gain skills in critical thinking, scholarly writing, and systematic approaches to problem-solving, all of which may translate into many areas of work. We hope our students will play a shaping role in psychological research and practice.
Learning Goals
Upon completion of the PhD in Psychology, concentration in Integral Transpersonal Psychology, students will be able to:
Goal 1. Demonstrate the ability to produce doctoral-level scholarly work in integral/transpersonal psychology
- Exhibit doctoral-level scholarly writing and critical thinking skills.
- Display expertise in a topic area within integral/transpersonal psychology.
- Employ interdisciplinary scholarship in a careful and rigorous way.
- Design and carry out scholarly research using an appropriate research method.
- Integrate creativity and embodiment in the processes of scholarship.
Goal 2. Engage in communities of scholarship in a professional and collegial manner
- Present scholarship effectively in a group setting.
- Engage in respectful dialogue with scholars from other fields and backgrounds.
- Employ integral and transpersonal psychology concepts in teaching contexts.
- Practice inclusiveness with and appreciation of diverse and minority voices.
Goal 3. Demonstrate expertise in an area of integral and/or transpersonal psychology
- Display command of the literature in an area of scholarship related to integral/transpersonal psychology.
- Participate in advancing scholarly research in the fields of integral and/or transpersonal psychology.
About the Program
The CIIS doctoral degree in Psychology with a concentration in Integral Transpersonal Psychology (ITP) is one of the few programs in the world that offers an online Ph.D. in whole-person approaches to psychology and that is a research-oriented program dedicated to systematic knowledge-building and the advancement of these fields.
Whole-person psychologies expand the horizons of conventional Western psychology to include mystical and spiritual experiences that transform and expand human consciousness, and by engaging in a comprehensive framework that includes the living systems of body, community, society, and the world as interconnected processes of evolution in a living, breathing cosmos. From this perspective, scientific work can be pursued with equal rigor as standard approaches, but it becomes possible to ask new and compelling research questions that lie close to the heart of what it is to be human.
This course of study will focus on experiential depth in the education process, integrative learning contexts, excellence in scholarship, and contributions to scholarly literature and scientific research. The ITP degree will offer focus areas in Integral and Transpersonal Psychology, in Consciousness Studies and Contemplative Neuroscience, and in Somatic Studies.
Focus Areas of the ITP Degree
Integral and Transpersonal Psychology
A transpersonal approach appreciates all that conventional psychology brings, but also gives weight to lived experience, intuition, and exceptional human experiences such as those associated with mysticism and spirituality. It is transformative psychology of the whole person, not just as an individual, but as part of a diverse, interconnected, and evolving cosmos. Integral psychology is a related approach that sees the typical human personality as fragmented and understands both healing and personal evolution as linked to the integration of these aspects into a more whole being. The integral tradition has roots in Indian spirituality through the writings of the Indian philosopher and spiritual teacher Sri Aurobindo.
Consciousness Studies and Contemplative Neuroscience
The study of consciousness brings a new dimension to both philosophy and psychology so that the process of knowledge is turned back onto itself and consideration is given to the remarkable fact of awareness, of knowing, that makes knowledge possible. What contemplative neuroscience adds to this is a careful consideration of those states of consciousness, such as meditation, that involve the cultivation of consciousness. If these states can be understood, both from within experience and with the tools of neuroscience, this may advance understandings of the human mind, of experiences associated with mysticism and spirituality, and of consciousness itself.
Somatic Studies
Somatics and somatic psychology consider the intimate lived experience of embodiment—of understanding what it is to be human from the inside, and how these experiences illuminate culture, consciousness, and healing. This focus area is designed to support students with experience in transformative body practice such as a martial art, bodywork, dance or movement practice, advanced sports practice, gyrotonics, pilates, or similar traditions, in enhancing their capacities for teaching their practice, advancing their understanding of its relevance to challenges in the contemporary world, and supporting their ability to publish scholarly work related to their area of expertise.
The integral tradition has roots in Indian spirituality through the writings of the Indian philosopher and spiritual teacher Sri Aurobindo, though it also refers to the contemporary inclusion of mindfulness and other whole person elements in psychology.
Transpersonal Science
The ITP degree focuses on research and systematic, scientific knowledge building. A transpersonal science applies the methods of science to the study of the whole person, fully embodied, embedded in a community, and engaged with the world, but it also represents a re-visioning of the scientific process. Transpersonal science is more than studying transpersonal topics in a scientific way, it is also about doing science in a way that is transpersonal, integral, and holistic. Such an approach includes everything from innovative ways to research the richness of lived experience to measuring neural responses with EEG.
Multi-Paper Dissertation
In addition to the standard format for doctoral dissertations, the program allows students to use an alternative format that consists of three peer-reviewed papers. Two of these papers are to have been published or accepted for publication; the other is to have been either published or accepted for publication or under review. Students who would like to pursue the multi-paper dissertation format are assessed by the faculty program committee on a case-by-case basis. As with the traditional dissertation, a dissertation proposal is submitted, a committee of three members is formed, a dissertation is prepared using the text of the three articles as its central content.
Admissions
Curriculum
The Ph.D. in Integral and Transpersonal Psychology at CIIS is a part-time online doctoral program that consists of 36.2-37.5 units of coursework plus a dissertation. Students are required to attend five-day residential intensives each fall and spring. The remainder of coursework is completed online. The course of study consists of core requirements, research courses, an area of focus (12 units) that includes advanced seminars, two comprehensive exams, and a dissertation written using original research. With advisor approval, admitted students may elect to add a second focus area to their program, thereby extending their course of study for an additional year.
Areas of Focus
Students choose from three focus areas: Integral and Transpersonal Psychology, Consciousness Studies and Contemplative Neuroscience, and Somatic Studies.
Integral and Transpersonal Psychology At least two courses from electives offered within the Integral and Transpersonal Psychology Ph.D. program. Students may add up to two program-approved, doctoral-level courses from within other online doctoral programs at CIIS (East-West Psychology, Transformative Studies, Philosophy, Cosmology, and Consciousness, Women's Spirituality). (12 units)
Consciousness Studies and Contemplative Neuroscience This focus area is designed to bring together consciousness studies, contemplative psychology, and neuroscience. Whole-person approaches bring to neuroscience the ability to ask new and thought-provoking questions that arise from the more holistic and systems perspectives of integral and transpersonal standpoints. The focus area will address issues of philosophical context through courses in consciousness studies that are offered within this program and other doctoral programs at CIIS. (12 units)
Somatic Studies The focus area in Somatic Studies is designed for students with experience or strong interest in movement, potentially including martial arts, a bodywork practice, a specific movement or dance practice, an advanced sport practice, or a gyrotonic, Pilates, or other similar practice. Coursework will consider the worldwide burgeoning of embodiment literature beginning in the mid-20th century and rapidly growing into the present, as well as its relevance to consciousness studies. (12 units)
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Ideal Students
There are three main groups of students for whom this degree is well suited. One such group is those with existing professionals who wish to advance their education and contribute to the development of better research and scholarship in their professional areas of work, such as psychotherapists, social workers, psychologists, counselors, consultants, activists, organizers, leaders, teachers, researchers, nurses, physicians, lawyers, or others in fields related to personal development, social change, or environmental protection. Another group consists of individuals who are entrepreneurially oriented, and who may wish to use their degree as the basis for consulting or writing and teaching in the public arena about their area of expertise. In addition, some students wish to pursue a Ph.D. as a means to more fully developing their personal gifts and potentials.