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Science Advocacy Weekend Workshop and Congressional Briefing Focus on Military
Psychology
by Heather O’Beirne Kelly and Sara Robinson
APA’s
Public Policy Office convened its 11th annual Science Advocacy Training Workshop
September 27 - 29, bringing in fourteen distinguished researchers to focus on
the topic of "Psychological Science and the Military." Following intensive
training in the federal legislative process and effective communication with
Congress and the media, the psychologists talked with Susan Chipman, from the
Office of Naval Research (ONR). Chipman gave an overview of the cognitive research
program at ONR and outlined some of the areas in which she’d like to see
more investigation. The group then developed a briefing sheet on behavioral
science funding within the Department of Defense, highlighting the likely impact
of substantial cuts made to this program in Fiscal Year 2004. The following
day, workshop participants used these briefing sheets to advocate for increased
support in Fiscal Year 2005 during meetings with their Congressional delegations
on Capitol Hill. Psychologists reported that a number of the Congressional staffers
were dismayed by the cuts and asked to meet with our researchers again for input
early in 2004 when the new defense funding bill will be drafted.
The weekend workshop brought together a strong group of scientists with wide-ranging
expertise, including human factors, psychobiology, and industrial/organizational
psychology. The group included: James Callan (Pacific Science & Engineering,
Inc.), Janis Cannon-Bowers (University of Central Florida), Nancy Cooke (Arizona
State University), William Howell (Arizona State and Rice Universities), Dennis
Kowal (IDA), Gerald Krueger (Wexford Group International), Sandra Marshall (San
Diego State University), Kevin Murphy (The Pennsylvania State University), Michael
Paley (Aptima, Inc.), Elaine Pulakos (Personnel Decisions Research Institutes,
Inc.), Karlene Roberts (University of California, Berkeley), William Strickland
(Human Resources Research Organization), Jennifer Vendemia (University of South
Carolina), and Stephen Zaccaro (George Mason University).
In conjunction with this year’s advocacy workshop, APA also co-sponsored
a Congressional briefing on September 29th with the office of Senator John McCain
(R-AZ) titled "Psychological Science in Support of the Soldier." In
his roles as Chairman of the Senate's Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee,
Member of the Armed Services Committee, and forme
r Naval Officer and POW, Sen. McCain has been a strong
supporter of defense research on Capitol Hill. His staff provided the Commerce
Committee hearing room for the briefing, which was designed to educate Congressional
defense staffers on the vital contributions of psychological research to our
military and national defense. Three APA members, Gerald Krueger, Robert Roland
(Industrial College of the Armed Forces, National Defense University), and Howard
Weiss (Purdue University's Military Family Research Institute) presented research
on human factors issues in designing infantry suits, operational research on
Prisoners of War, and military family issues related to service member recruitment
and retention. William Howell (Arizona State and Rice Universities, former Chief
Scientist for Human Resources for the U.S. Air Force, and former APA Executive
Director for Science) moderated the panel and offered a vision for future human-centered
research within the military.
PPO staff will continue to advocate both for appropriate funding of
psychological research within the Department of Defense and
for the translation of relevant research into more effective technology, operations
and personnel/family programs within the military. Bringing our members’
research expertise to bear on the federal policy process is our most effective
tool, and we expect this group of military psychologists to play a critical
role!
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