Amy Heberle

Associate Professor, Psychology

Dr. Heberle is an Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology at Clark University. She received an A.B. in English from Harvard University in 2009 and a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from the University of Massachusetts, Boston in 2017. She completed her clinical internship at Yale University and her postdoctoral training at Boston College. Dr. Heberle has been at Clark since 2018.

Dr. Heberle’s research focuses on how individuals and families function within systems of racism, classism, and patriarchy. She is particularly interested in how children and adolescents navigate these systems and develop within them. Dr. Heberle’s work primarily uses qualitative and mixed methodologies, with a goal of deeply understanding lived experiences of the phenomena that she studies. 

Dr. Heberle regularly teaches introductory and advanced qualitative methods courses at the undergraduate and graduate level. She also teaching child and adult psychological assessment to clinical psychology doctoral students. Other areas of teaching interest include child mental health, mental health intervention, and feminist psychological approaches to understanding motherhood.

Dr. Heberle’s work has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the Spencer Foundation, the Society for Research in Child Development, and the American Psychological Association.

Dr. Heberle will not be accepting a new doctoral student for Fall 2026. 

Degrees

  • Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology, University of Massachusetts, Boston, 2017
  • M.A. in Clinical Psychology, University of Massachusetts, Boston, 2013
  • B.A. in English Literature, Harvard University, 2009

Affiliated Department

Psychology

Scholarly and creative works

Awards and grants

  • A Pilot Study of Key Elements in an in an Intervention to Support Anti-Racist Parenting Among White Parents

    Clark Faculty Development Fund

    clock icon Jun. 1, 2021 – May. 31, 2022
  • Measurement of Parent and Teacher Critical Consciousness

    Spencer Foundation

  • A Mixed Methods Pilot Study of a Multi-Modal Intervention to Support Anti-Racist Parenting Among White Parents

    Society for Research on Child Development (SRCD)