Ollendick is known for his research on
phobias and
anxiety in children. as well as Cognitive Behavior Therapy He is the author of 400 plus research articles, 100 plus book chapters, and the author or editor of 35 plus books. His books include one of the first books written for the treatment of children and adolescents called Clinical Behavior Therapy with Children in 1981 (Plenum Press) and more recently the Oxford Handbook of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology (2018) and Innovations in CBT Treatment for Childhood Anxiety, OCD, and PTSD (2019, Cambridge). He is Past-President of the Association for the Advancement of Behavior Therapy (1995), the Society of Clinical Psychology (1999), the Society of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology (2007), and the Society for the Science of Clinical Psychology (2010). The recipient of several NIMH grant awards, his clinical and research interests range from the study of diverse forms of child psychopathology to the assessment, treatment, and prevention of these child disorders from a social learning/social cognitive theory perspective. He has served as the mentor and dissertation advisor for 45 doctoral students – all since joining Virginia Tech in 1980. Dr. Ollendick received an Honorary Doctorate from Stockholm University in 2011 and holds Honorary Professor Positions at Roehampton University in London, Griffith University in Brisbane, Australia, and Sydney Institute of Technology in Sydney, Australia. He was awarded the Distinguished Research Contributions to the Field of Clinical Child Psychology in 2007 (APA), the Career/Lifetime Achievement Award from the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies in 2013, the Lifetime Achievement Award for Scientific Contributions from the Society of Clinical Psychology (APA) in 2017, the Aaron T. Beck Lifetime Career Award from the Academy of Cognitive Therapy in 2019, the Lifetime Career Award from the Spanish AITANA Society for Child and Adolescent Clinical Psychology in 2019, and the Distinguished Scientist Award from the Society for the Science of Clinical Psychology in 2020. ==Editorial activities==