Internal Family Systems Research Fellowship

Fellowship Intent

The purpose of the fellowship is to expand the number of clinical researchers investigating the Internal Family Systems (IFS) approach. The fellowship provides support for research fellows who can conduct—or co-lead—rigorous efficacy and effectiveness studies that examine IFS as a treatment for common public health concerns (e.g., PTSD, depression, anxiety, substance use, eating disorders), and/or other health-related, societal needs using widely accepted research methodologies. Studies that include designs which help elucidate a mechanistic understanding of the IFS treatment process from a biomedical, neuroscience or psychological perspective may also be considered.

Fellow Responsibilities

Engagement in IFS-oriented research is the Fellow’s main responsibility. The Fellowship will require maintaining a primary focus on developing a sustainable research career, through manuscript preparation, study design and conduct, academic conference presentations, and submission of federal and philanthropic grants. The fellow will be mentored by Zev Schuman-Olivier, MD who is the Center Director and Research Director for the CHA Center for Mindfulness and Compassion in the Department of Psychiatry at CHA.

The Fellowship will be full-time from September 1st, 2023 to August 31st, 2024 with the potential for an application for renewal for up to one year. The Fellow will be able to participate in the clinical post-doctoral training opportunities associated with the CHA Department of Psychology post-doctoral training program. The fellow will receive a post-doctoral fellowship academic appointment to Harvard Medical School Department of Psychiatry.

The Fellow may spend up to an average of 10 hours per week of clinical time during Year 1 to meet licensure requirements. The Fellow will be supervised by CHA faculty with expertise in IFS interventions (Martha Sweezy, PhD, Hanna Soumerai, LICSW, Mary Catherine Ward, LICSW, Larry Rosenberg, PhD) and will be able to engage with Dr. Richard Schwartz, PhD, who will serve as an IFS mentor.

Unless they have already completed an approved prior IFS training, the Fellow shall be expected to participate in formal Level 1 and Level 2 IFS trainings at no cost to the Fellow. Level 1 training participation will be encouraged to have started prior to the start of the fellowship year. After acceptance in the fellowship, CMC and the Foundation for Self-Leadership will work with the fellow applicant to schedule an online Level 1 training (if it has not already been completed by the applicant), which may require attendance by the applicant during several weekday and weekend days prior to the fellowship start date.

Eligibility

The Foundation expects the selected post-doctoral or junior faculty researcher to be a highly qualified researcher with great potential in the field. The selected researcher should either be fully credentialed in a field of specialty or have completed a dissertation for a PhD in psychology (or equivalent) and seeking a post-doctoral placement.

The identified Fellow should be willing to engage in extensive, IFS-focused research that will be vetted through publications in peer-reviewed journals and presented in reputable forums and conferences. The fellow is expected to apply for external funding from leading granting agencies where applicable and pursue development as an independent investigator.

Fellowship Funding

The Fellowship, which is made possible by a grant from the Foundation for Self Leadership, provides an annual stipend in line with NIH post-doctoral research fellowship salaries and commensurate with the applicant’s past post-doctoral research experience. Additionally, the Fellow will receive from the Foundation a research-related travel fund of up to $5,000 per year for presentations at conferences or added professional development. Applicants are expected to work an average of 5 clinical hours per year for 2 years (or 10 hours in Year 1 if psychology post-doctoral fellow) in order to receive the full annual stipend.

This Fellowship grant will be awarded on a yearly basis with a renewal application required to continue for a second year based on progress in the first year of the fellowship.

Application Process

Applicants are expected to complete the online application form and submit the following materials to jnovy@challiance.org by 1/2/2023 at 5pm.

Materials to submit include the following:

-Application Form

-Updated CV (in PDF format)

-All Relevant Transcripts from Clinical Internship and PhD Program with GPA

-Writing Sample (e.g., PDF of a first author paper in a peer-reviewed journal)

-Three (3) Signed Letters of Support (Including at least one from a research supervisor and one from a clinical supervisor)

Online interviews will start to be held in early January with determination of the position by the middle to end of January 2023.

This Fellowship grant will be awarded on a yearly basis with a renewal application required to continue for a second year based on progress demonstrated in the first year of the fellowship.


About Dr. Richard Schwartz, Developer of the Internal Family Systems Approach

Richard Schwartz, PhD began his career as a systemic family therapist and an academic. Grounded in systems thinking, Dr. Schwartz developed Internal Family Systems (IFS) in 1985 in response to clients’ descriptions of various parts within themselves. He focused on the relationships among these parts and noticed that there were systemic patterns to the way they were organized across clients. He also found that when the clients’ parts felt safe and were allowed to relax, the clients would experience spontaneously the qualities of confidence, openness, and compassion that Dr. Schwartz came to call the Self. He found that when in that state of Self, clients would know how to heal their parts.

A featured speaker for national professional organizations, Dr. Schwartz has given thousands of workshops and keynote addresses. He published many books, including Internal Family Systems Therapy (Second Edition, Guilford, 2020), The Mosaic Mind (Trailheads Press, 2003), and No Bad Parts (Sounds True, 2021) as well as over fifty articles about IFS. Dr. Schwartz founded and led the IFS Institute, formerly The Center for Self Leadership, which is a vibrant and rapidly growing organization today. Dr. Schwartz is a faculty member in the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and senior faculty at the Cambridge Health Alliance Center for Mindfulness and Compassion.

About IFS Psychotherapeutic Modality

IFS Therapy is at the forefront of a movement toward a more collaborative therapeutic approach that relies on clients’ intuitive wisdom and Self-leadership to guide their healing. IFS offers a clear, non-pathologizing, and empowering view of human cognitive and emotional life.

There is emerging, growing empirical evidence in support of IFS as a psychotherapeutic treatment, acknowledged by SAMHSA in 2015. It is now practiced by thousands of licensed therapists and other professionals throughout the United States and internationally. Mental health care professionals and others trained in the IFS model can easily integrate it into a wide variety of practices using the unique methods IFS offers to create safe environments for clients to become Self-transforming. You can learn more at The Institute of Family System’s website.

About the Foundation for Self Leadership

The Foundation for Self Leadership’s purpose is to foster greater emotional and relational healing and wellbeing—leading to a more peaceful world—through the practice of Self Leadership as identified by IFS. The Foundation has funded four independent research studies and IFS-oriented projects in K12 schools. It has recently launched a leadership-development initiative to support present and prospective agents of social change in marginalized communities and continues to engage in incubating innovative applications of the IFS model in various professional settings and societal contexts. The Foundation’s operation and programs are entirely funded by charitable giving from members of the extended IFS community.

About Cambridge Health Alliance and the Center for Mindfulness and Compassion

The Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA) is a non-profit, Harvard Medical School affiliated, healthcare provider serving Cambridge, Boston, and their metropolitan areas with 3 hospitals, 12 outpatient primary care clinics and 3 teen health clinics situated across 5 metro-north Boston region cities. The CHA Department of Psychiatry is a full academic department of the Harvard Medical School, with nationally prominent adult and child psychiatry faculty and residency programs. In order to perform the many tasks necessary to provide high quality patient care, teaching, and research, CHA employs more than 4,000 people in professional and support positions. CHA outpatient psychiatry clinics record over 130,000 outpatient visits per year. CHA ambulatory services record over 2,000,000 outpatient visits a year. The child and adolescent outpatient service provides almost 14,000 visits per year. Psychiatry Department staff is also engaged in numerous clinical trials, including work on addictions, adolescent mental health, trauma, opioid use, chronic pain, mindfulness, depression and anxiety, and health equity.

The Center for Mindfulness and Compassion (CMC) is a vibrant multi-disciplinary center integrated into the Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA) system in the CHA Department of Psychiatry, affiliated with Harvard Medical School. CMC is dedicated to enhancing the health and well-being of CHA’s diverse community by integrating evidence-based mindfulness and compassion into health care. CMC’s mission is realized across five main arms: patient care, employee well-being, scientific research, professional education, and community service. CMC was founded in 2014 with broad support.