Success in the Psych Field
Audrey Beaudoin '17 graduated with a B.A. in psychology in 2018 and quickly secured a job with Easterseals as a registered behavior technician in their Autism Services program.
Audrey Beaudoin '17 graduated with a B.A. in psychology in 2018 and quickly secured a job with Easterseals as a registered behavior technician in their Autism Services program.
For Associate Professor of , there is pure joy in seeing the students she has mentored walk as they get their degree at commencement.
“Seeing them learn things they could not do when they started, and where they end up, is why I do what I do,” she says. “Their successes are my successes.”
When it came time to choose a college, Madison Hoppler ’24 opted for the financial security of the campus located practically in her backyard over a more focused pursuit of her creative passion at art school.
That decision meant she could attend UNH while living in her childhood home in Durham, studying art in hopes of forging a career in a creative space. But it also meant putting on hold her desire to explore the world more fully beyond the town she grew up in.
And all of that made her precisely the young woman Kelsy Stromski was looking for..
UNH researchers have collected new data that will aid oyster restoration in New Hampshire's Great Bay EstuaryĚýand support ongoing efforts to understand the ecological changes taking place in the bay as the result of disease and habitat loss.
Before graduating last September fromĚý, Amy Denham worked with , director of museum studies with the department of history, on recreating an 18th/early 19th century recipe for indigo dye as part of her final project.
Faculty in have a strong legacy of tackling environmental challenges through research and education. So when master’s students Joy O’Brien and Alma Hernandez wanted to pursue careers studying Arctic systems, they turned to , a faculty member with a UNH research and teaching program focused on Arctic ecosystem changes and their local and global impacts.Ěý
, a Ph.D. candidate in , describes mentorship as an important component of her education at the university.
Research Assistant Professor and Ph.D. student Kamala Nasirova met the summer of 2021 through a mutual colleague. Nasirova, a second-year student in UNH’s education program, was interested in policy-related work that aligned with her interests in education, equity, inclusion and student opportunity gaps.
The has an excellent history of faculty and graduate students collaborating on quality improvement projects through research and application. Clinical Associate Professor was the ideal mentor for Emily Stewart '21G, aĚý graduate and nurse practitioner at Riverwoods Exeter, a senior retirement community in New Hampshire.
A new satellite equipped with a UNH-built instrument will improve weather predictions on Earth and in space.Ěý