Training at Blanton-Peale
BIPOC Fellowship Program (for MSW & MHC Interns)
BIPOC Fellowship Program (for MSW & MHC Interns)
The Blanton-Peale Institute & Counseling Center is committed to cultivating equitable access to culturally engaging quality mental health care and meeting the unique needs and lived experiences of Black, Indigenous, Latin, Asian and other historically marginalized cultural communities. To this end, Blanton-Peale offers a fellowship program for advanced year graduate students enrolled in accredited social work (MSW) and mental health counseling (MHC) degree programs in New York City, who are committed to providing culturally engaging mental health services for people of Black, Indigenous, Latin, and Asian cultures. We use the term BIPOC (the acronym for Black, Indigenous, People of Color) in the name, to signify the fellowship program’s focus on serving these communities.
Blanton-Peale Fellows receive extensive clinical training, mentorship, as well as individual and group supervision from September to May, culminating in a graduation ceremony. In the program’s reflective process group, Blanton-Peale Fellows explore themes relevant to identity formation, culture, positionality, power dynamics, equity, relationships, and holistic wellness. Through the program Blanton-Peale Fellows grow to embody culturally engaging holistic practice, graduating as informed, skilled clinicians trained for long-term BIPOC community impact and empowerment.
The BIPOC Fellowship Program, exclusively for MSW and MHC interns, meets all requirements for MSW and MHC graduate program field placement internships.

Training
- Dynamic learning curriculum
- Clinical training
- Individual supervision
- Reflective Process Group

Community Impact
- Fellows work primarily with individuals, couples, and families of Black, Latin, Indigenous, Asian, and other historically marginalized cultural communities.
- Fellows provide in-person and virtual care, plus groups and psychoeducational projects.

Holistic Approach
- Fellows receive extensive clinical training in the Blanton-Peale holistic approach, psychodynamic and psychoanalytic technique, in addition to a host of culturally engaging, relational, and trauma-informed practices.
Eligibility and Application Information
Applicants must be enrolled in an accredited MSW or MHC graduate program and in good academic standing.
Applicants must be seeking advanced year MSW or MHC field placement internship experience in New York City, with intention to contribute to the New York City mental health care system post-graduation.
Applicants must demonstrate passion and commitment to trauma-informed, resilience-oriented, equitable, and culturally engaging, interdisciplinary, and holistic mental health care.
Applicants must demonstrate an awareness of historical and current inequities in mental health services, approaches, and systems of care.
Applicants must be available to engage fully in the training program which is exclusively on-site for all field placement internship hours and includes requirements for: (1) extensive self-reflection, (2) willingness to consider and deconstruct inequities in clinical practice, (3) operating in compliance with NY State Office of Mental Health MHOTRS Article 31 regulations, (4) working with a caseload of approximately 10 clients per week, and (5) providing diagnostic assessments, individual therapy, family therapy, groups, and community engagement.
Applicants are primarily selected by their graduate school and recommended to interview with Blanton-Peale during the Spring Semester.
If you are interested in more information, please contact us at training@blantonpeale.org and include “FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM” in the subject line.

Impact: Clinic and Beyond
The opportunity for BIPOC patients to work with a therapist of color is transformative. Our BIPOC MH fellowship allows for opportunity for fellows to work with a wide range of individuals and couples in a robust outpatient clinic.