Education
As a licensed psychologist who earned his Doctor of Philosophy in psychology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Verhaagen previously served as clinical director for three mental health agencies.
As a licensed psychologist who earned his Doctor of Philosophy in psychology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Verhaagen previously served as clinical director for three mental health agencies.
He is board-certified in Child and Adolescent Clinical Psychology by the American Board of Professional Psychology and is a Fellow of both The American Board of Clinical Psychology and The American Board of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology. He has been cited several times in United States of America Today and Newsweek. As an author, Verhaagen has written on a range of topics, including parenting, violence risk, and therapeutic processes.
His writings are unified by a focus on the positive, resiliency-based aspects of psychology.
Verhaagen has individually authored two books Published in 2010,Therapy with Young Men: 16-24 Year Olds in Treatment (Routledge) provides a model of therapy for working with young men in their late teens and early twenties.
The book draws from the influences of Motivational Interviewing, Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, and Positive Psychology. His book, Parenting the Millennial Generation: Guiding Our Children Born Between 1982 and 2000 (2005, Greenwood Publishing), offers research-based parenting strategies for building resilience in children.
As with most of his writing, the book focuses on how to build on each individual’s unique strengths.
Verhaagen co-authored Assessing and Managing Violence Risk in Juveniles with Doctor Randy Borum, (2006, Guilford Press). He also co-authored Sexually Aggressive Youth: A Guide to Comprehensive Residential Treatment (2001, Praeger Press) with Tim Lemmond, Master of Arts With Lemmond, he also co-wrote the chapter, “Successful Transitions of Sexually Aggressive Youth from Secure Residential Settings to Less Secure Community Settings,” published in On Transitions from Group Care: Homeward Bound in 2003. Verhaagen contributed the opening chapter entitled, “Seven Keys to Developing Your Dream Non-Managed Care Practice” to Earning a Living Outside of Managed Mental Health Care (2010, APA Books).
He also contributed a chapter to Breaking Barriers in Counseling Men: Insights and Innovations (2013, Routledge).