Career Day
For career day I interviewed a physiologist, Tamara Goldsby. She's a part time physiologist and does a lot of her work out of her home. She is also a professor at CIHS( California institute for Human Science), which is a college. Tamara went to about four different colleges. She lived in England for four years, attending Oxford University and the London School of Economics’ Psychology Departments. Shortly after she started at Oxford University’s D.Phil. doctoral degree program, she studied Social Psychology and Psychology respectively at the London School of Economics and the University of Surrey, where she got her Ph.D. in Psychology. She also has master’s degrees in Counseling Psychology and Human Behavior with positions in counseling, as well as advising and mentoring students. At CIHS she teaches a class on singing bowl meditations. She is currently conducting an ongoing study in conjunction with UCSD on the beneficial effects of Tibetan singing bowl meditations. Which are these huge metal bowls that you place around someone laying down and you take this thick wooden stick and bang it on the bowls and it sends off this vibration meditating sound that is believed to be relaxing and knock down the walls to your chakra. Your chakra are the energy points or knots in the subtle body, not the physical body but physiological. Dr. Goldsby is very spiritual and believe's strongly in good and bad energy's but focus's on the good ones. Dr. Goldsby is core faculty at CIHS, she teaches a variety of courses such as clinical psychology courses in the doctoral program, as well as complementary healing courses such as Psychoacoustics, which is sound healing.
For career day I interviewed a physiologist, Tamara Goldsby. She's a part time physiologist and does a lot of her work out of her home. She is also a professor at CIHS( California institute for Human Science), which is a college. Tamara went to about four different colleges. She lived in England for four years, attending Oxford University and the London School of Economics’ Psychology Departments. Shortly after she started at Oxford University’s D.Phil. doctoral degree program, she studied Social Psychology and Psychology respectively at the London School of Economics and the University of Surrey, where she got her Ph.D. in Psychology. She also has master’s degrees in Counseling Psychology and Human Behavior with positions in counseling, as well as advising and mentoring students. At CIHS she teaches a class on singing bowl meditations. She is currently conducting an ongoing study in conjunction with UCSD on the beneficial effects of Tibetan singing bowl meditations. Which are these huge metal bowls that you place around someone laying down and you take this thick wooden stick and bang it on the bowls and it sends off this vibration meditating sound that is believed to be relaxing and knock down the walls to your chakra. Your chakra are the energy points or knots in the subtle body, not the physical body but physiological. Dr. Goldsby is very spiritual and believe's strongly in good and bad energy's but focus's on the good ones. Dr. Goldsby is core faculty at CIHS, she teaches a variety of courses such as clinical psychology courses in the doctoral program, as well as complementary healing courses such as Psychoacoustics, which is sound healing.