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David L. DuBois, Ph.D., is a Professor in the Division of
Community Health Sciences in the School of Public Health at the University of
Illinois—Chicago. He has authored many studies on youth mentoring,
including a meta-analytic review on the effectiveness of youth mentoring
programs. He is co-editor of the landmark Handbook of Youth Mentoring. Professor DuBois co-chaired the National
Research Summit on Mentoring and co-authored the National Research Agenda for
Youth Mentoring. Currently, he is conducting NIH-funded research on the
GirlPOWER! program and is a WT Grant Distinguished Fellow in residence at Big
Brothers Big Sisters of America. He has mentored a child as a Big Brother.
Janis Kupersmidt, Ph.D., is President and CEO of
innovation Research and Training (iRT), which conducts research and creates
products and services to enhance the well-being of youth, families, communities,
and organizations. Formerly a professor of psychology at UNC—Chapel Hill, she
is an expert in the social and emotional development of children and focuses on
program development and translational research addressing substance abuse,
delinquency, and dropout prevention. She is the Principal Investigator on an
NICHD-funded project to develop Mentoring Central, a web-based mentor training
program. She also has contracted with MENTOR to develop the Third Edition of the
Elements of Effective Practice.
Michael Nakkula, Ed.D., is Practice Professor in the
Graduate School of Education at the University
of Pennsylvania. His
research focuses on integrating counseling, mentoring, and educational
processes in urban schools to create contexts that allow students to thrive.
His projects include Project IF (Inventing the Future), a strength-based youth
development initiative, and a longitudinal study of Early College High Schools
funded by the Gates Foundation. Dr. Nakkula works with many national
organizations to create applied research strategies to study developmental and
educational initiatives. He has created measures to assess mentor and protégé
perspectives on the quality of youth mentoring relationships.
Andrea Taylor, Ph.D., is Director of Training in the Center
for Intergenerational Learning, Clinical Assistant Professor in the College of Health Professions--Division of Public Health, and Senior Research Fellow in the Institute for Survey Research at Temple
University. She has
authored several publications on intergenerational mentoring as an approach to
promoting positive youth development and preventing substance abuse and school
failure. Dr. Taylor is the developer of Across Ages, an intergenerational
mentoring program that has been designated as an evidence-based model in the
National Registry of Effective Program Practices and has been widely
replicated.
2009 Guest Speakers
Harold
Briggs, Ph.D., is Professor in the School of Social Work
at Portland State University.
He has published extensively on the use of research evidence in practice,
addressing topics such as evidence-based practice, evidence-based management,
evidence supported treatments, and practice based evidence in the fields of
child welfare, children’s mental health, and juvenile justice.
Carla Herrera, Ph.D., is a Senior Policy Researcher for
Public/Private Ventures, a national non-profit research and policy
organization. Dr. Herrera has conducted numerous studies and written
influential reports on various types of mentoring programs. She directed a recent
national, multi-site, randomized control design evaluation of Big Brothers Big
Sisters school-based mentoring programs and is currently
working with Big Brothers Big Sisters of America to enhance their school-based
mentoring model.
Michael Karcher, Ph.D., Ed.D., is Professor in the College of Education and Human Development at
University of Texas-San Antonio. He is an expert on cross-age peer mentoring in
schools. He recently reported on his “Study of Mentoring in the Learning
Environment (SMILE),” a randomized control design evaluation of school-based mentoring
in conjunction with Communities in Schools. Dr. Karcher is the author of numerous
articles on mentoring in school settings, and he is co-editor of the Handbook of Youth Mentoring.
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