Photo of the exterior of the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences

PhD in Social Welfare students win Arol Shack Dissertation Awards

The PhD in Social Welfare doctoral program’s Arol Shack Dissertation Award was established through donations from friends and alumni of the program along with a matching gift from Gigi Nordquist. The fund honors the many years of work and dedication that Arol Shack devoted to the doctoral program, its students and faculty members as the department assistant.

The amount of awards given each year depends on funds and the number of applications received. Funds are used to support the student’s work on his/her dissertation research. The expectation is that the work funded through this award will be completed by the end of the one-year grant award period. Full-time and part-time students who have an approved prospectus, a dissertation chair and have passed the Qualifying Exam, are eligible to apply. Any dissertation topic is accepted.

A faculty committee reviews the applications for the dissertation award and makes recommendations to the chair of the doctoral program based on the merits of the proposals and the financial needs of the applicant. Formal recognition of the award occurs at the graduate studies awards ceremony each spring.

Announced on Dec. 17, this year’s winners are:

  • Kylie Evans for her proposal, “An Examination of Relational Resilience Among Adolescent Girls and Emerging Adult Women Exposed to Childhood Intimate Partner Violence”
  • Tyrone Hamler for his proposal to investigate the prevalence and predictors of decisional conflict among non-dialysis-dependent African Americans over the age of 50 who are diagnosed with advanced chronic kidney disease.
  • Fei Wang for her proposal to examine primary caregiver’s stressors and depressive symptoms for those that provide care for people with Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Learn more about the honor.