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The Human
Development and Family Studies (HDFS) program currently employs 12
full-time faculty members in addition to 2 full-time Child Development
Center staff members. Faculty members are committed to helping students
succeed. Students receive advising from HDFS faculty and College of Education
and Human Development’s Undergraduate Student Services office, which
provides a variety of services to assist students in meeting their professional
goals.
The HDFS faculty is an interdisciplinary team with teaching and research
expertise in individual and family development across the life span. Faculty
members are involved in local, regional, state, and national service to
direct-service agencies, government agencies, advisory boards, and professional
organizations. They also are involved in collaborative community partnerships
involving both service and research.
The HDFS faculty studies research topics of national concern among scholars,
practitioners, and policy-makers. Individual and collaborative research
projects and grants have included the following topics:
· cultural issues in parenting and education of children
· evaluation of early intervention programs
· family policy
· grandparents raising grandchildren
· infant and child attachment
· parent and caregiver attributions
· post-abortion psychological responses
· poverty and welfare reform
· risk and resilience in adolescents
· social interaction with preschoolers in inclusive settings
(Alphabetic listing of HDFS faculty)
Thomas Chibucos, Professor
Priscilla Coleman, Associate
Professor
Jean Gerard, Associate Professor
Laura Landry-Meyer, Associate Professor
Randall Leite, Assistant Professor
Dawn Murrell, Lecturer
Susan Peet, Lecturer
Jacqueline Roe , Associate Professor
Ruben Viramontez Anguiano, Assistant Professor
(CDC Staff)
Cynthia Baum, CDC Specialist
Vicki Knauerhase, CDC Specialist
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