Sharon Brehm

Sharon Stephens Brehm
Nationality American
Fields Social psychology
Alma mater Duke University (B.A., Ph.D.)
Harvard University (A.M.)
Known for Past president of the American Psychological Association

Sharon Stephens Brehm is a retired psychologist who served as president of the American Psychological Association (APA). She taught psychology at the University of Kansas for 15 years. She held administrative roles at the State University of New York at Binghamton and Ohio University before she became chancellor of Indiana University Bloomington.

Biography

Early life

Brehm was born in Roanoke, Virginia and earned an undergraduate degree in psychology from Duke University. She went to Harvard University for an AM in psychology and then came back to Duke to earn a PhD.[1]

Career

Brehm spent 15 years at the University of Kansas, where she taught psychology and directed the honors program.[2] She served as dean of arts and sciences at the State University of New York at Binghamton from 1990 to 1996.[3] She later served as provost at Ohio University and she was chancellor at Indiana University Bloomington between 2001 and 2003.[4]

She served as the 2007 president of the APA. During her term, the organization created the Presidential Task Force on Integrative Healthcare for an Aging Population, APA-SRCD Task Force on Math and Science Education (with the Society for Research in Child Development) and the Presidential Task Force on Institutional Review Boards and Psychological Science.[1]

Personal

Brehm met psychologist Jack Brehm when she went to work for him as a graduate assistant. The couple got married in 1968. Though they divorced several years later, they continued to work together and even co-authored a book.[5] Jack Brehm constructed the theory of reactance and Sharon adapted it to the clinical psychology setting.[6]

In a 2013 interview, Brehm discussed her Alzheimer's disease diagnosis, the early symptoms of which had appeared in 2010.[7]

Works

References