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About Marcel

Marcel's Photo 2.jpg

The foundation of my work is my passion for helping individuals and organizations understand, apply, practice, and integrate principles of healing.

I developed the Core Resonance coaching process to help individuals and organizations work from and with their core alignment.

I am Clinical Mind-Body Therapist who also mentors therapists, coaches, yoga therapy students, and integrative health practitioners.

 

Before I discovered Mind-Body practices, I received a PhD in Organization Development.

 

I combine 2000-year-old principles from the wisdom of Yoga with modern tools of coaching and process facilitation.  The Core Resonance Coaching process is the result. 

I host a podcast called Doing Differently about healing and transformation (www.doingdifferently.com).

Credentials and Training

After I received a Master’s degree and a Ph.D., and worked in the field of Organization Development, I followed the path of a new profession with another 17 years of training and practice as a Clinical Mind-Body Therapist.

I have been mentored by Chase Bossart, Yoga Well Institute, since 2005.

M.A. in Communication, University of New Mexico

Ph.D. in Organizational Development, Syracuse University

C-IAYT, YATNA (Yoga as Therapy North America)
RYS-500, Healing Yoga Foundation

Ongoing Studies, Yoga Well Institute

OSHER CENTER FOR INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE AT VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY
Organizational Consultant (2013 - present)

 

MINDTOON LAB and YOGA MIND TOOLS

Meditation Consultant (2012 – present)

 

CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF INTEGRAL STUDIES
Adjunct Faculty, Masters in Integrative Health Studies Program (2010 – 2014)

 

FORESEE CONSULTANTS, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA.

Organizational Consultant. (January, 2005 - 2007).

  • Organizational consultant providing services in process facilitation and strategic planning focused in areas of healthcare, non-profit, and higher education.

 

BAY AREA ORGANIZATION DEVELOPMENT NETWORK. SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA.

Board of Directors. (January 2005 - May 2006).

 

SCHOOL OF INFORMATION STUDIES, SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY, SYRACUSE, NEW YORK. (January, 1996 - September, 2004).

Researcher and Program Manager (January, 2000 - September 2004).

  • Researcher and Program manager for a three-year ($500,000 budget) research project funded by NSF: A Nation-Wide Study of Social Networks and Information Technology Use by Residential Real Estate Agents.

  • Designed, developed, and administered survey research project (9000+ surveys).

  • Managed project, budget, stakeholders and service provider relationships

 

Instructor, (February 2000).

  • Helsinki School of Economics and Business Administration in Mikkeli, Finland. Developed and taught a semester long course on Strategic Planning and Organizational Change Management.

 

Visiting scholar, (March, 2000).

  • The Bayerische Elite Akademie, Munich, Germany. Invited as visiting scholar to a month long residential program on intercultural relations, and information technology in the global business environment.

 

Researcher (January, 1997 - May, 1998).

  • Researched supplier management processes of contract programmer acquisition in two large Fortune 500 corporations for The Society for Information Management (SIM) IT Procurement Working Group.

 

Instructor (January, 1997 - December, 1999).

  • Developed and taught the following courses at Syracuse University, School of Information Studies:

    • Strategic Planning and Change Management.

    • Management and Design of Information-Based Organizations.

    • Critique of the Information Age.

 

UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO, DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNICATION AND JOURNALISM, ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO, AUGUST, 1993 - MAY, 1996.

Researcher and project manager (January, 1995 - May, 1996).

  • Managed research process (coordination, logistics, fieldwork, interviews, data collection and analysis, presenting reports and publishing findings).

  • Served as researcher and project manager for four funded research projects, each six months in duration.

  1. Study of Silicon Valley, Austin, Tokyo, and Yokohama as Technopoli.

  2. Technology Transfer from Government Research Institutions to Private Industry in the U.S. and Japan.

  3. The Formation of High-Technology Start-Ups.

  4. University Research Centers: Creation and Sustainability.

 

Researcher (May, 1995).

  • Supported as a researcher by the New Mexico U.S. Japan Center and the Japanese Ministry of Industry and Trade to travel to Japan to study technology transfer from government research institutions to private industry.

 

Instructor (August, 1993 - May, 1995).

  • Developed and taught the following courses at University of New Mexico, Department of Communication and Journalism:

    • Diffusion of Innovations.                                              

    • Interpersonal, Intercultural, Organizational and Mass Communication.

    • Interpersonal Communication.

email Marcel Allbritton, PhD
marcel.allbritton@me.com

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