Suzanne Bartle-Haring, HDFS Alumni Spotlight, April 2024

Suzanne Bartle-Haring, HDFS Alumni Spotlight, April 2024Suzanne came to UConn with a BS in psychology from Penn State University hoping to become a therapist. She enrolled in the UConn HDFS master’s in Marriage and Family Therapy program. She selected the Marriage and Family Therapy degree because it meant she wouldn’t have to get a Ph.D. to practice. The irony of course is she did get a Ph.D. at UConn in Family Studies with a specialization in Marriage and Family Therapy. Her time at UConn was foundational and challenging. She started the master’s program with no idea about HDFS or Marriage and Family Therapy and quickly, thanks to her professors, became immersed in both. She had worked in a research lab as an undergraduate but wasn’t passionate about research until taking the first research methods course in HDFS. From that she got the “research bug” and hasn’t looked back since. Although the thesis was optional in the MS program, she did a thesis, collecting her own data from multiple family members. She took courses with many of the professors, and Ron Sabatelli said he was particularly impressed with her work and asked if she would consider a Ph.D. She said yes, still not really knowing what she was going to do with her life. She completed the Ph.D. with Ron Sabatelli as her advisor, and Rob Ryder and Steve Anderson as her committee members. They were very supportive, and they wrote other manuscripts together. She had some publications when she completed her degree. She went off to “save the world” with research and got a position at a research contract firm in the DC area. She hated it, and through contacts at UConn, got the opportunity to be a visiting professor at Virginia Tech’s Falls Church campus in a Marriage and Family Therapy master’s program. As soon as she got back into academia and started to teach and mentor students, she knew she was where she belonged. Again, through contacts at UConn, she applied for and got her current position at The Ohio State University as a professor in their Couple and Family Therapy Program.

Suzanne has been with The Ohio State University for 32 years, she received tenure in 1997, and became a full professor in 2007. She became the program director for their accredited Ph.D. program in Couple and Family Therapy in 2003. Currently she holds this position and is working to have a new master’s program in Couple and Family Therapy accredited. Throughout her career she has published her research, taught courses at the undergrad and graduate level and supervised new clinicians. Whenever she starts a new manuscript she thinks about the lethal red pen of Steve Anderson and the comments and edits of Ron Sabatelli on her first few manuscripts at UConn. They taught her how to write, how to think and how to be critical of the literature. She has used those skills and passed them on to her own students. When she met Steve and Ron at conferences she would joke with them that they were now grandparents to her own students. Now she has her own “grandchildren” in terms of academic pedigree and she is continually grateful for the training she received at UConn. This training and her work culminated in her receipt of the 2023 Cumulative Contribution to Family Therapy Research Award from the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapy. Suzanne was honored to receive this award.

Suzanne will be retiring in the next few years and hopes to paint and travel. Her time at UConn seems like a long time ago, but it shaped her and provided the foundation for her success.


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