Gerald Amada

Dr. Gerald Amada, one of the founders and a director of the Mental Health Program, City College of San Francisco, is now retired after a thirty-year career at that college.  He also maintained a private psychotherapy practice for over thirty years.   He received B.A. and M.S.W. degrees at Rutgers University and his Ph.D. in social and clinical psychology at the Wright Institute, Berkeley; California.  He has published thirteen books and over ninety articles and book reviews on the subjects of mental health, psychotherapy, and disruptive student issues. His latest non-fiction books are: A Guide to Psychotherapy (Random House), The Mystified Fortune-Teller and Other Tales from Psychotherapy (Rowman and Littlefield) and The Power of Negative Thinking (Madison Books).  He has also lectured at over 150 colleges and universities throughout the United States and Canada on the subject of the disruptive college student for over forty years. Dr. Amada has been a book reviewer for the American Journal of Psychotherapy, University Press of America, The San Francisco Chronicle, The American Psychological Association and the Journal of College Student Psychotherapy.  He was a member of the editorial board and the book review editor of the last-mentioned journal.  He is the recipient of the 1984 Award of Excellence in the category of administrator,  Post Secondary Education, conferred by the National Education Special Needs Personnel, Region 5, which comprises 18 states.received B.A. and M.S.W. degrees at Rutgers University and his Ph.D. in social and clinical psychology at the Wright Institute, Berkeley; California.  He has published thirteen books and over ninety articles and book reviews on the subjects of mental health, psychotherapy, and disruptive student issues. His latest non-fiction books are: A Guide to Psychotherapy (Random House), The Mystified Fortune-Teller and Other Tales from Psychotherapy (Rowman and Littlefield) and The Power of Negative Thinking (Madison Books).  He has also lectured at over 150 colleges and universities throughout the United States and Canada on the subject of the disruptive college student for over forty years. Dr. Amada has been a book reviewer for the American Journal of Psychotherapy, University Press of America, The San Francisco Chronicle, The American Psychological Association and the Journal of College Student Psychotherapy.  He was a member of the editorial board and the book review editor of the last-mentioned journal.  He is the recipient of the 1984 Award of Excellence in the category of administrator,  Post Secondary Education, conferred by the National Education Special Needs Personnel, Region 5, which comprises 18 states.