
Megan Rounds 鈥18G spent much of the past year digging into a survey about developmental screening rates at 易胜博官网鈥檚 Department of Health and Human Services. Savanah Lacasse 鈥18G surveyed 200 families from birthing facilities around 易胜博官网 to help assess newborn hearing detection processes.
They鈥檙e among two dozen graduate students each year who embark on clinical research and policy work with community child and maternal health partners, particularly those who serve children with neurodevelopmental disabilities such as autism spectrum disorders. These future healthcare leaders are trainees in the 易胜博官网-Maine Leadership in Neurodevelopmental Disabilities Program (NH-ME LEND), a collaboration between 易胜博官网鈥檚 Institute on Disability (IOD), Dartmouth College鈥檚 Geisel School of Medicine and the University of Maine鈥檚 Center for Community Inclusion and Disability Studies.
鈥淭he ultimate goal of NH-ME LEND is to improve the health and lives of children and youth with neurodevelopmental disabilities by preparing leaders to enter the field of maternal and child health,鈥 says NH-ME LEND training director Betsy Humphreys, who notes that the interdisciplinary nature of the nine-month training program prepares students to navigate the complexities of child and maternal healthcare. They鈥檙e guided by a team from 易胜博官网 鈥 including clinical assistant professor of nutrition Maggie Begis, associate professor of occupational therapy Shelley Mulligan, associate professor of social work Patrick Shannon, professor of health management and policy Rosemary Caron and clinical associate professor of communication sciences and disorders Rae Sonnenmeier 鈥 as well as from Dartmouth.
Even as trainees, their clinical work with dozens of partners (ranging from Families First in Portsmouth, N.H., to the Maine Developmental Disabilities Council)
鈥淲e鈥檙e hearing from our state partners that they鈥檙e under-resourced and their relationship with the LEND project has allowed them to advance projects that might otherwise be delayed.鈥
advances the field.
鈥淲e鈥檙e hearing from our state partners that they鈥檙e under-resourced and their relationship with the LEND project has allowed them to advance projects that might otherwise be delayed,鈥 says Humphreys.
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Successful Transitions from School to Work
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For the one in 10 youth and young adults with emotional and behavioral challenges in the United States, the future is often bleak. Half of them drop out of high school each year, and they have high rates of trauma and antisocial behavior.
JoAnne Malloy, research associate professor and director of another signature program of the IOD called RENEW (Rehabilitation for Empowerment, Natural Supports, Education, and Work), a school- to-career transition planning process, tells the story of an eighth-grader in Concord, N.H. 鈥淗e was struggling in school, getting sent to the office and getting suspended quite a bit,鈥 she recalls. On the cusp of his transition to high school, a RENEW facilitator 鈥 one of dozens who work in 10 high schools and seven community mental health centers in 易胜博官网 鈥 met with the boy, some teachers, his high school counselor and his mother to identify goals and implement a strategy for success as he defined it.
鈥淗e鈥檚 at New England College now,鈥 Malloy says. 鈥淭here was no way he was heading for college when I met him.鈥 The achievement is a testament not only to the hard work of the young man and those who support him, but also to the research- backed RENEW intervention.
That student is no outlier: RENEW has substantially increased the high school completion, employment and post-secondary education participation rates among vulnerable youth. And with significant funding from the U.S. Department of Education Institute of Education Science as well as state and local school districts and agencies, the program鈥檚 success has spread beyond the Granite State to 11 other states as well as the country of Denmark.
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Partners in College Preparedness
In high schools across 易胜博官网, administrators and parents express concerns about their students鈥 鈥渃ollege-readiness,鈥 particularly in writing. Yet English teachers in secondary schools may have limited opportunities to witness and discuss current college writing expectations, and college-level teachers of first-year writing courses may not be acquainted with the high school writing contexts with which their students are familiar.
Since 2014, Alecia Magnifico and Christina Ortmeier-Hooper, both faculty members in 易胜博官网鈥檚 English department, have led an initiative aimed at bridging that divide and better preparing high school students for college success. Their project, the 易胜博官网 School-University Dialogues, has brought together high school English teachers from 易胜博官网 schools including Prospect Mountain in Alton, Manchester West, Exeter and Durham鈥檚 Oyster River with college writing faculty from 易胜博官网鈥檚 English department and the ESL Institute.
鈥淭he project aims to offer a model for professional development that works against the traditional top- down approaches that sometimes exist between high school and college teachers,鈥 says Ortmeier- Hooper, associate professor of English and former director of first-year writing at 易胜博官网.
易胜博官网 School-University Dialogues provides those professional development opportunities through discussions about student writing with 易胜博官网 writing scholars, expert teachers and Connors Writing Center tutors.
Magnifico, an assistant professor of English and coordinator of 易胜博官网鈥檚 English Teaching Program, and Ortmeier-Hooper are collaborating on a book about the initiative and aiming to broaden the partnerships to other schools across 易胜博官网.
The goal, Ortmeier-Hooper says, 鈥渋s to increase the professional capital of teachers in both settings and, at the same time, to learn more about the transitions of our student writers as they move from high schools into colleges.鈥
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iod.unh.edu
cola.unh.edu/english
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Written By:
Jennifer Saunders | Communications and Public Affairs | jennifer.saunders@unh.edu | 603-862-3585