Ann Rader-Tate Oral History Interview
Streaming Media
Description
Finding her way into the Social Sciences in college, Ann Rader-Tate earned her Masters in 1984 at Colorado State University and launched her career in Counseling. Rader-Tate taught parenting classes in Greeley CO before she moved to Arizona where she lived and worked in Cottonwood AZ and the Verde Valley. As a Counselor at Yavapai Community College, she taught assertiveness, wellness, and Intro to Psychology. After moving to Santa Fe, Rader-Tate taught Psychology and Sociology at Santa Fe Community College until she retired. With her partner, George Tate, she championed multicultural counseling in expanding approaches to counseling. Rader- Tate worked in a period of significant change in approaches to counseling and therapy. She also represented adjunct faculty in creating the first ever hiring salary matrix at Santa Fe Community College.
Publication Date
11-2-2018
Keywords
Colorado State University, women’s counseling, parenting classes, Catholic Social Services, Yavapai Community College Cottonwood AZ, Northern Arizona University Flagstaff AZ, Parents Anonymous (foster families), healthy relationships, eating disorders, anti-depressants, multicultural counseling, diversity, counselor licensure, Esperanza Shelter Santa Fe.
Disciplines
Labor History
Publisher
Digital Initiatives and Scholarly Communication, University Libraries, University of New Mexico
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Pinkey, Diane and Ann Rader-Tate. "Ann Rader-Tate Oral History Interview." (2018). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/wphnm/47
Comments
1280x720; MP4; No institutional restrictions are placed on the use of this collection. Use of material is allowed for educational and research purposes. The University Libraries do not hold copyright.