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About the Contributors

Susan E. Belangee, PhD, LPC, NCC, ACS, works in private practice in Canton, Georgia, specializing in using Adlerian strategies with clients struggling with body image and eating disorders. She has published several articles and contributed to book chapters on the topic as well. She serves as a supervisor in her practice for counselors pursuing licensure in Georgia and is a member of the Georgia Society of Adlerian Psychology. Susan is currently the past president of the North American Society of Adlerian Psychology (NASAP) as well as a diplomate of NASAP. She is a faculty member for the International Committee of Adlerian Summer Schools and Institutes; has worked as an associate professor at Holy Family University, where she served as institutional review board chair; and has taught online for Drake University and the Adler Graduate School. She presents regularly at local, regional, national, and international conferences on Adlerian psychology and its relevance to clinical research and practice. In addition to Adlerian organizations, Susan maintains membership in the American Counseling Association (ACA) and Chi Sigma Iota Academic and Professional Honor Society International.

Regina Bordieri, PhD, is a licensed marriage and family therapist who owns and operates a private practice with a physical location in New York City (www.familyandcoupletherapy.com). She earned her doctorate in psychology in Alliant International University’s Couple and Family Therapy Program (accredited by the Commission on Accreditation for Marriage and Family Therapy Education) and maintains her license as a marriage and family therapist in California. She regularly provides online therapy in her private practice, including therapy services that are conducted exclusively online, hybrid services that combine online and in-person therapy sessions, and stand-alone assessment and relationship enhancement programs. She has a unique specialty focused on couples coping with a bipolar diagnosis (bipolarcouples.com). She was the recipient of the 2017 American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (AAMFT) Dissertation Award for her research on couples with a bipolar-diagnosed partner and has provided numerous clinical trainings at national and state conferences and in mental health facilities on the systemic treatment of bipolar disorder. She presented a career development seminar on incorporating online therapy into a private practice at the 2019 AAMFT Conference. She is currently an adjunct professor in the psychology department of the City University of New York at Brooklyn College. She has also taught as an adjunct professor in several marriage and family therapy graduate programs. She currently provides online supervision and clinical trainings in online therapy.

Mykia J. H. Griffith, MA, earned her master’s degree in clinical mental health counseling from the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor. She is currently a licensed professional counselor intern as well as a marriage and family therapist associate. She is a member of and has given presentations for both ACA as well as the International Association of Marriage and Family Counselors. She is also a member of the Association for Play Therapy and plans to focus her expertise in working with children and their families. She is currently working toward more publications while also directing time and energy to helping her community.

Marty Jencius, PhD, earned his doctorate in counselor education from the University of South Carolina in 1996. His 16 years of clinical experience include work as an addictions counselor, a clinical mental health counselor, a coordinator of services for severely emotionally handicapped children, and a counselor in a private practice serving business and industry. He is founder and list manager of CESNET-L (a professional listserv for more than 4,000 counselor educators), cofounding editor of The Journal of Technology in Counseling (a web-based, peer-reviewed journal), founder of Counselor Education in Second Life (virtual world counselor training; http://SL.CounselorEducation.org), founder and editor of The Counselor Audio Source (a podcast series for counselors; http://counseloraudio-source.net/), and producer of The Faculty Meeting (a podcast about faculty life; www.thefacultymeeting.net/). He is past president of the Association for Counselor Education and Supervision. Professor Jencius has more than 100 print publications in books, book chapters, journal articles, and articles along with an additional 40 digital podcasts related to counseling and counselor education.

Stephanie R. Marder, MA, MEd, LPC, LCDC II, is a doctoral candidate in Kent State University’s Counselor Education and Supervision program. Marder earned a bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of New Hampshire and a master’s degree in psychology from Boston University. Several years later she graduated with her master’s degree in education in clinical mental health counseling from Kent State University and obtained her licensed professional counselor degree. She currently practices at Family Behavioral Health Services, LLC, in Mayfield Village, Ohio. Marder specializes in working with adolescents, emerging adults, and families. Her scholarly interests include using the latest technology to benefit clients and enhance treatment outcomes as well as developing tools to better assist adolescents and emerging adults manage anxiety concerns.

Jason K. Martin, PhD, is the clinical director and an associate professor of counseling at the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor. He is a licensed marriage and family therapist and licensed professional counselor in Texas and serves on the board of directors of the Texas Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (TAMFT). He is an AAMFT approved supervisor and has maintained a private practice for many years. Jason is a two-time recipient of the TAMFT Susan Speight Governmental Leadership Award (2015 and 2020). He has researched and published on the development of theoretical orientation among student counselors and the phenomenon of fatherhood. He holds a doctorate in marriage and family therapy from Michigan State University and a master’s degree in marriage and family therapy from Abilene Christian University.

Rachel McCrickard, MA, is a licensed marriage and family therapist and the founder/chief executive officer of Motivo, an online platform that connects therapists to clinical supervisors and peer consultants. After years of experience providing therapy and supervision in both urban and rural areas, Rachel began to recognize the difficulty many therapists experience when attempting to find quality clinical supervision. Impassioned by her entrepreneurial spirit, Rachel fostered the creation of Motivo in 2017 to create an easier path to licensure for therapists through the responsible use of technology.

Angela McDonald, PhD, is dean of the School of Health Studies and Education and a professor in the Department of Educational Leadership at Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She earned her doctorate in counselor education at the College of William and Mary in 2006. She has been a licensed counselor in North Carolina for 13 years, working in a variety of settings, and she has been published in several journals, including the Journal of Counseling & Development. She is also the past president of the American Association of State Counseling Boards and the past chair of the North Carolina Board of Licensed Professional Counselors. She is a national certified counselor.

Jeffrey Parsons, PhD, is a professor of counseling at Lindsey Wilson College and serves as the director of the Counselor Education and Supervision program. He is a licensed professional clinical counselor in the state of Kentucky. Prior to serving in his current role, Jeff served 7 years as director of program evaluation and technology for the School of Professional Counseling and 3 years as director of teaching and technology effectiveness for the Office of Academic Affairs. He recently completed a term as a board member (including 2 years as chair) for the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs.

Harrison Tyner is a social impact entrepreneur, technology innovator, and startup adviser to numerous early-stage tech companies. As founder and chief executive officer of WeCounsel Solutions, Harrison launched the first cloud-based software platform for behavioral health, which has facilitated more than 1 million virtual sessions to date. With expertise in telemedicine, health care, and software as a service, Harrison regularly collaborates with other startup founders to develop innovative solutions that make a positive impact on the community.

Appendix Authors

Kenda Dalrymple, JD, is an attorney and the managing partner of Dalrymple, Shellhorse, Ellis & Diamond, LLP, in Austin, Texas. She earned her undergraduate degree in communications from Baylor University and her Juris Doctor degree from Baylor University Law School. For the past 26 years, she has represented hundreds of professionals before their licensing boards on complaint and license-related cases. She also presents frequently on ethics, risk management, confidentiality of records, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 and Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act regulations, and other matters related to administrative law and mental health. Although she excels at helping professionals when a problem has arisen in their practices, she much prefers to educate and train them to recognize common pitfalls and avoid trouble, if possible. She is past president of the Austin Bar Association’s Administrative Law Section and the Kappa Alpha Theta Austin Alumnae Association and a past course director for the State Board of Texas Advanced Administrative Law Seminar, an annual 2-day continuing legal education seminar. For the past 10 years, she has been a member of the American Psychological Association (APA) Board of Directors’ Standing Hearing Panel, which hears and decides ethics cases brought by the APA.

Amber Hord-Helme, MA, LPCC-S, NCC, has been a licensed counselor for more than 15 years. She has owned her own private group practice in Versailles, Kentucky, for the past 10 years. She is currently a doctoral candidate in the Counselor Education and Supervision program at Lindsey Wilson College in Columbia, Kentucky. She has been an adjunct instructor for Lindsey Wilson College since 2017 and has supervised interns and provisionally licensed postgraduate practitioners since 2012. She is a former secretary of the Kentucky Mental Health Counseling Association and is currently president of the Kentucky Association for Assessment and Research in Counseling. Her current areas of research include counseling for clients with dyslexia, implementing telehealth counseling in private practice, and developing professional counselor identity in early professionals.

Distance Counseling and Supervision

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