Mid Atlantic Internship Consortium

Program Philosophy and Aims

The Mid Atlantic Internship Consortium (MAIC) is an American Psychological Association (APA) accredited program offering a doctoral psychology internship that trains future professionals in acquiring clinical skills and competencies that are evidence-based, ethically sound, and culturally sensitive. MAIC is a dedicated group of psychological service providers located in Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C. The consortium is partially affiliated with The Chicago School, Washington, D.C. MAIC has seven site members and provides approximately 23 intern positions next year. To date, MAIC has trained more than 200 interns. MAIC has been a member of the Association of Psychology Postdoctoral and Internship Centers (APPIC) since 2006 and has been an APA-accredited internship since 2015. MAIC was reaccredited in 2024. The next site visit will be in 2034.

MAIC ascribes to a practitioner-scholar model of training, with a philosophy including developmental training experiences and shared resources. MAIC provides learning experiences to interns and evaluates their performance based on profession-wide competencies.

MAIC is committed to providing an internship experience in accordance with APPIC and APA requirements, consisting of supervision, didactic seminars, case presentations, scholarly reading, and a broad range of direct clinical experiences in a variety of intervention and assessment modalities, delivered to diverse populations. Interns are also given increasing responsibilities including supervision of others and consultation. Opportunities are also available to learn about program development, management, and business practices.

Training Aims and Competencies

The aim of the program is to train interns in a practitioner-scholar model to provide services that are evidence-based, ethically sound, and culturally sensitive. The training model is sequential, cumulative, and graded in complexity. Training in ethical and professional standards will be incorporated in supervision and seminar presentations to prepare the interns for the highest standards of professional conduct.

MAIC Competencies

MAIC adheres to the nine Profession-Wide Competencies set out by the American Psychological Association’s Standards of Accreditation for Health Services Psychologists. These standards are essential for performing all services in the field of psychology. These competencies include:

Research

By the conclusion of the internship, the intern will:

  • Demonstrate the substantially independent ability to critically evaluate and disseminate research or other scholarly activities (e.g., case conferences, presentations, publications) at the local, regional, or national level.

Ethical and Legal Standards

By the conclusion of the internship, the intern will:

  • Demonstrate knowledge of the current APA Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct, relevant professional standards and guidelines, and relevant laws, regulations, rules, and policies governing health service psychology at the organizational, local, state, regional, and federal levels.
  • Recognize ethical dilemmas as they arise, apply ethical decision-making processes in order to resolve the dilemmas, and seek consultation around complex ethical and legal dilemmas.
  • Conduct oneself in an ethical manner in all professional activities.

Individual and Cultural Diversity

By the conclusion of the internship, the intern will:

  • Demonstrate an understanding of how one’s own personal/cultural history, attitudes, and biases may affect how one understands and interacts with people different from oneself.
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the current theoretical and empirical knowledge base as it relates to addressing diversity in all professional activities including research, training, supervision/consultation, and service. 
  •  Demonstrate the ability to integrate awareness and knowledge of individual and cultural differences in the conduct of professional roles (e.g., research, services, and other professional activities).
  • Demonstrate the ability to independently apply one’s knowledge and approach in working effectively with the range of diverse individuals and groups encountered during internship and respond professionally in increasingly complex situations.

Professional Values and Attitudes

By the conclusion of the internship, the intern will:

  • Behave in ways that reflect the values and attitudes of psychology, including integrity, deportment, professional identity, accountability, lifelong learning, and concern for the welfare of others.
  • Engage in self-reflection regarding one’s personal and professional functioning; engage in activities to maintain and improve performance, well-being, and professional effectiveness.
  • Actively seek and demonstrate openness and responsiveness to feedback and supervision.
  • Respond professionally in increasingly complex situations with a greater degree of independence as one progresses across levels of training

Communication and Interpersonal Skills

By the conclusion of the internship, the intern will:

  • Develop and maintain effective relationships with a wide range of individuals, including colleagues, communities, organizations, supervisors, supervisees, and those receiving professional services.
  • Produce and comprehend oral, nonverbal, and written communications that are informative and well-integrated; demonstrate a thorough grasp of professional language and concepts.
  • Demonstrate effective interpersonal skills and the ability to manage difficult communication well.

Assessment

By the conclusion of the internship, the intern will:

  • Demonstrates a current knowledge of diagnostic classifications systems, functional and dysfunctional behaviors; including both consideration of client strengths and psychopathology, as well as considering the behavior within its context (e.g., family, social, societal and cultural).
  • Select and apply assessment methods that draw from the best available empirical literature and that reflect the science of measurement and psychometrics.
  • Collect relevant data using multiple sources and methods appropriate to the identified goals and questions of the assessment as well as relevant diversity characteristics of the service recipient.
  • Interpret assessment results, following current research and professional standards and guidelines, to inform case conceptualization, classification, and recommendations, while guarding against decision-making biases and distinguishing the aspects of assessment that are subjective from those that are objective.
  • Communicate orally and in written documents the findings and implications of the assessment.

Intervention

By the conclusion of the internship, the intern will:

  • Establish and maintain effective relationships with the recipients of psychological services.
  • Develop evidence-based intervention plans specific to the service delivery goals.
  • Implement interventions informed by the current scientific literature, assessment findings, diversity characteristics, and contextual variables.
  • Demonstrate the ability to apply the relevant research literature to clinical decision making.
  • Modify and adapt evidence-based approaches effectively when a clear evidence-base is lacking.
  • Evaluate intervention effectiveness, and adapt intervention goals and methods consistent with ongoing evaluation

Supervision

By the conclusion of the internship, the intern will:

  • Demonstrate knowledge of supervision models and practices.
  • Apply this knowledge in direct or simulated practice with psychology trainees, or other health professionals.

Consultation and Interprofessional/Interdisciplinary Skills

By the conclusion of the internship, the intern will:

  • Demonstrate knowledge and respect for the roles and perspectives of other professions.
  • Demonstrate knowledge of consultation models and practices and apply this knowledge in direct or simulated consultation with individuals and their families, other health care professionals, interprofessional groups, or systems related to health and behavior.
Member Training Sites

Although each member of MAIC shares the same training philosophy, goals, and approach to training, and serves a diverse population, each also offers context-specific opportunities.

A description of training at each member site can be found below.

  • BASICS Group Practice (Forestville, MD)
  • Capitol Hill Consortium for Counseling and Consultation (D.C., MD, & VA)
  • Fairfax Mental Health & Wellness, Inc. (Fairfax, VA)
  • Integrated Psychology Associated of McLean, LLC (McLean, VA)
  • Mirror Mental Health (Crofton, MD)
  • Prince William Family Counseling (Manassas, VA)
  • The MECCA Group, LLC (Washington, D.C.)
Program Structure

MAIC is a full-time, 12-month, 2,080-hour internship. Interns will spend at least four days per week at their clinical training site. Wednesdays are dedicated to didactic seminars and group supervision, which is held either at The Chicago School, Washington, D.C. The didactic series features guest speakers, workshops, and case presentations. Group supervision focuses on professional development, supervision of supervision, and other training issues.

Interns will primarily engage in direct clinical services, consultation, outreach, and scholarly activities. Direct clinical services will include both psychotherapy and assessment. At the outset of the training year, interns will complete a Training Contract with their primary supervisor, outlining the goals, requirements, and activities within the training experience. The Training Contract will also detail the intern’s weekly schedule.

Doctoral interns will additionally participate in didactics, trainings, and case conferences at their clinical sites. 

MAIC prepares a Training Handbook for each site and Brochure for applicants which includes descriptions of MAIC policies, intern positions, sites, selection criteria, due processes, and benefits.

Application Requirements

MAIC only considers applicants from The Chicago School, Washington, D.C., in the first phase of the match process. Applicants from other Chicago School campuses will be considered in later phases of the match. Applicants from other institutions may be considered in Post Match Vacancy.

MAIC participates in the APPIC match process and utilizes the AAPI Online service. In addition to the AAPI application, please submit:

  • Cover letter
    • Address all cover letters to the MAIC Director and to each Primary Site Supervisor for any site to which you are applying. We encourage you to write one general cover letter and include separate paragraphs for each site. Primary Site Supervisors’ names are listed in the Brochure.
  • 3 letters of recommendation
  • Supplemental Materials
    1. De-identified assessment report
    2. De-identified intervention summary or treatment summary

 Additional application requirements:

  • Completion of all course work, training, and comprehensive exams prior to starting internship
  • Strong clinical skills, in both intervention and assessment competencies
  • Strong leadership, organizational, and communication skills
  • Pass site-specific criminal background check requirements

Phase I Application Deadline: 11/01/2025

Please contact the MAIC Director for more information about the application process.

Shavonne Moore-Lobban, Ph.D.
Director, Mid Atlantic Internship Consortium
901 15th Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20005
E-mail: [email protected]
Phone: 202-706-5061

Benefits:

MAIC is a full-time, 2,080-hour doctoral internship position. The stipend is $29,000 for the 2026-2027 training year, paid on a monthly or bi-monthly basis. Interns are granted 10 vacation days and 5 sick/personal days, 8 national holidays, weekly socialization time, and 3 hours of clinical research time.

Internship Admissions, Support, and Initial Placement Data

Accreditation Status

MAIC is fully accredited by the American Psychological Association. For more information on the accreditation process, please contact APA:

American Psychological Association 
Office of Program Consultation and Accreditation
750 First Street, NE
Washington, D.C. 20002-4242
(T) 202-336-5979 (F) 202-336-5978

Website: www.apa.org/ed/accreditation
Email[email protected]