Bob Sinclair, PhD
Professor of Industrial-Organizational Psychology
Clemson University
My CV
I am a Professor of Industrial-Organizational Psychology at Clemson University as well as the director of the doctoral program in the Department of Psychology. I am a founding member and Past-President of the Society for Occupational Health Psychology. I also am a Fellow of the American Psychological Association and the Society for Industrial-Organizational Psychology. I currently serve as Founding Editor-in-Chief of Occupational Health Science, and as an editorial board member of the Journal of Business and Psychology, Journal of Occupational Health Psychology and Group and Organization Management. My research focuses on occupational health including economic stress, health-related aspects of organizational climate, and the employment relationship.
Background
I grew up in Auburn, Maine and lived in the same house (built by my father) from the time I was born in 1965 until I graduated from Edward Little High School in 1983. My mother grew up in New Brunswick, Canada and moved to Maine as a young adult. In Maine, she married my father, a Maine State Trooper who died of a brain tumor when I was quite young. My mother's longest career was as an elementary school teacher, mostly in Auburn, where she lived in the family house until passing away in 2018.
After graduating high school, I joined the United States Marine Corps, and served until 1986. I didn't see too much of the world, only being stationed in North and South Carolina. Throughout much of my time in the USMC, I remember thinking “there has to be a better way” to handle many of the organizational issues we encountered as junior enlisted personnel. Many of the issues we faced back then continue to dominate my scholarly work including supportive/destructive leadership, resilience, work schedules, job stress, incivility, fairness, and work-life conflict.When I got out, I returned to Maine and completed my undergraduate education at the University of Maine at Farmington in Farmington, Maine. I then moved to Detroit, Michigan, where I completed my Master's and Doctoral degrees at Wayne State University and began my professional career. Since then, I have lived in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Beaverton and Portland, Oregon, and currently in Piedmont, South Carolina.
After leaving the USMC in 1986, I obtained my BA in psychology from the University of Maine at Farmington (in 1990). I knew that I wanted to be a college professor, almost from the first day I set foot on campus. Throughout my education, however, I had never heard of Industrial-Organizational (IO) psychology, much less taken a course in it. As a senior, I had an exit-interview conversation with my department chair in which I indicated that I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do with my life, but that I wanted it to be something to do with psychology and the workplace. He replied “that’s industrial-organizational psychology” and I immediately went looking for graduate programs in IO.
I was fortunate to be admitted to the IO psychology doctoral program at Wayne State University and completed my Ph.D. in 1995. Lois Tetrick was my mentor and she and I worked on several studies of labor union members’ attitudes toward their union. I was fortunate to have authored/co-authored a few papers in that area that are reasonably frequently cited among union researchers. I also began a long-time collaboration with Jim Martin, a management professor at Wayne State with whom I have conducted several studies on unionized retail workers through the United Food and Commercial Workers Union.
In reflecting on both collaborations, I came to the realization that what interested me about labor unions was their essential role in creating better working conditions for workers rather than the labor movement per se. Fortunately, Lois was heavily involved in creating the field of occupational health psychology around this time, and through her mentorship, I gained exposure to the emerging area of occupational health psychology and started my professional journey toward being an occupational health scholar.
My first academic position was in the IO psychology program at the University of Tulsa. During my second year as a faculty member, I helped transform that program from what was essentially a few student folders in two boxes on a colleague’s office floor into a program with a full student handbook, well-defined curriculum, and systematic procedures for admitting and evaluating IO students.
In 2000, I joined Portland State University, where I worked until 2008 (I was promoted to Associate Professor with tenure in 2005). Portland State was a great experience with incredible IO colleagues such as Leslie Hammer, Donald Truxillo, and Mo Wang, all of whom I still work with today. Almost immediately after joining Portland State, I begin working more actively to further develop the field of occupational health psychology. I played a central role in creating the Society for Occupational Health Psychology for which I was a founding member, and served as SOHP's third President from 2007-2008. I was proud to receive a Distinguished Contributions to Occupational Health Psychology award from APA/NIOSH for this work. At the same time, Leslie Hammer and I obtained some of the first federal funding for graduate education in Occupational Health Psychology with grants and contracts totaling roughly $600,000 by the time I left Portland State.
In 2008, I accepted a faculty position at Clemson University. Shortly after arriving at Clemson, I was asked to serve as the graduate program director, and I was promoted to Professor of Psychology in 2013. I was hired at Clemson to build on the University’s reputation in occupational health psychology and my colleagues and I have helped develop Clemson's reputation as one of the leading IO PhD programs specializing in OHP. I am proud to have helped elevate our IO program’s stature in this area and I believe that our reputation will only continue to grow in the future.
Teaching/Mentoring
I come from a family of teachers. My mother, sister, two of my nephews, and several of my other relatives and close friends have been involved in the education system, working in positions ranging from professors, principals, and educational consultants to elementary school teachers, substitute teachers, private tutors, and teacher’s assistants. These people have helped me appreciate the many ways societal well-being fundamentally depends on a high quality education system and I feel a strong ethical and professional responsibility to do my part to help produce well-educated citizens.
I have advised over 25 of my own doctoral students through completion of the PhD, all of whom have gone on to successful careers. I have also served on the committees of 30+ doctoral students and 20+ master’s students, mostly in IO/Applied Psychology. As an instructor, I have taught many graduate students over the years on a wide range of topics ranging from multivariate statistics and job analysis to occupational health and organizational theory. Presently, my primary teaching responsibilities include two graduate courses: PSYC 8620 - Organizational Psychology and PSYC 8820 - Occupational Health Psychology. I also typically teach two undergraduate courses: PSYC 4710 - Psychological Testing and PSYC 3100 Advanced Experimental Design. I also currently serve as the graduate program director at Clemson and in that role I have been responsible for ensuring that many future IO professionals receive a high quality education.
Professional Service
I have an extensive record of professional service to the IO and OHP communities, both directly to SIOP and SOHP and to IO Psychology as a constituency in other professional organizations and settings. I also have made several other important service-related contributions to the broader IO community. I currently serve as an editorial board member for the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology Journal of Business and Psychology, and Group and Organization Management and I currently serve as Founding Editor-in-Chief of Occupational Health Science. I also have served as a NIOSH study section member as well as a committee member for the last several APA/NIOSH Work Stress and Health conferences. However, my most important professional service contribution has been to serve as president of the Society for Occupational Health Psychology (SOHP). I am proud of my record of leadership and professional service and definitely believe I have had an impact on the science and practice of occupational health through this work.
Personal Interests
I enjoy both playing and watching sports as well as fantasy sports. I am getting too old for playing much these days but my historical favorites have been basketball, softball and skiing. I am a life-long Boston Red Sox fan, having attended my first game at Fenway in 1975. I also grew up with the Boston Celtics and became a big fan of the Portland Trailblazers while we lived in Portland, although I have gone back to focusing on the Celtics as the team I follow the closest in any sport and, of course, the (national champion) Clemson Tigers.
My work and family life keep me busy enough that I don't have time for too many hobbies and interests, when we have free time it mostly involves house projects or working out. I enjoy a wide range of music, with some of my personal favorites being the Grateful Dead, Bob Dylan, Steely Dan, Led Zeppelin, the Rolling Stones, Bob Marley, Miles Davis and John Coltrane, and acid jazz/chill music. Playing guitar is a passion of mine and my main hobby. I have played guitar and bass in several jazz/rock bands over the years, bands with names like Upstroke, The Others, Naked Squirrel (not my choice!), Studio 909, Blaming Amy, Eyes of the World, Saints of Circumstance, and Tangled up in Blue.