Ep. 31: Working with State Agencies on Child Wellbeing with Lonnie Berger, University of Wisconsin

Ep. 31: Working with State Agencies on Child Wellbeing with Lonnie Berger, University of Wisconsin

This month we welcome Lonnie Berger, director of the Institute for Research on Poverty and Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor and Ph.D. Program Chair at the School of Social Work at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. His work aims to inform public policy in order to improve its capacity to assist families in accessing resources, improving family functioning and wellbeing and ensuring that children are able to grow and develop in the best possible environments. Lonnie and Chris discuss the intersection of public policy, family structures and family resources and how those affect child wellbeing. How Lonnie's grounding in social work, as opposed to a social science disipline, informs and broadens his research. Lonnie has extensive experience working with state agencies in Wisconsin around child wellbeing generally and also the foster system. He descibes specific examples of issues and successes in partnering with state agencies to further child wellbeing. Lonnie Berger is the director of the Institute for Research on Poverty and Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor and Ph.D. Program Chair at the School of Social Work at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He is engaged in studies in three primary areas: (1) examining the determinants of substandard parenting, child maltreatment, and out-of-home placement for children; (2) exploring associations among socioeconomic factors, parenting behaviors, and children’s care, development, and wellbeing; and (3) assessing the influence of public policies on parental behaviors and child and family well-being.

Jaksot(56)

Ep. 8: Evaluating Military Family Programs with Brian Leidy, The Military Projects, Cornell

Ep. 8: Evaluating Military Family Programs with Brian Leidy, The Military Projects, Cornell

Brian Leidy is director of The Military Projects in the Bronfenbrenner Center. He and Karl discuss the project's work doing process evaluation for the military and the challenges and importance of supporting this unique community. Brian D. Leidy is a senior extension associate and the principal investigator for the Military Projects in the Bronfenbrenner Center for Translational Research. This work is funded primarily through grants from USDA/NIFA. He has formerly worked as a managerial consultant for social service agencies and educational institutions evaluating training, social service programs, and policy initiatives; and at Cornell doing training in supervision and administration with adult protective service supervisors and adult home administrators throughout New York State. Prior to coming to Cornell, he worked in public child welfare and mental health programs for children and adolescents.

8 Marras 201616min

Ep. 7: "Talk to Your Child" with Marianella Casasola, Human Development, Cornell

Ep. 7: "Talk to Your Child" with Marianella Casasola, Human Development, Cornell

In this episode Karl Pillemer talks with Marianella Casasola about her work examining infant cognitive development, early word learning, and early spatial cognition. Dr. Casasola talks about her experiences partnering with Head Start to do research, details of her more recent findings, and she gives some advice that any new parent can easily employ to boost infant learning. Marianella Casasola is an associate professor of human development and a faculty fellow of the Bronfenbrenner Center for Translational Research (BCTR) at Cornell University. She studies infant cognitive development and early word learning with a particular interest in the interaction between thought and language during the first few years of development. She is especially interested in the emergence of spatial concepts, the early acquisition of spatial language, and the interplay between spatial cognition and spatial language in infants and young children.

6 Syys 201618min

Ep. 6: Incarceration and Inequality with Christopher Wildeman, Policy Analysis & Management, Cornell

Ep. 6: Incarceration and Inequality with Christopher Wildeman, Policy Analysis & Management, Cornell

This time Karl talks with Christopher Wildeman about his research on mass incarceration and inequality. Christopher Wildeman is an associate professor of policy analysis and management in the College of Human Ecology at Cornell University, where he is also co-director of the National Data Archive on Child Abuse and Neglect and a faculty fellow here in the Bronfenbrenner Center for Translational Research. Chris talks about his research and the way working with communities has strengthened his work. His research and teaching interests revolve around the consequences of mass imprisonment for inequality, with emphasis on families, health, and children. He is also interested in child welfare, especially as relates to child maltreatment and the foster care system.

18 Heinä 201619min

Ep. 5:  Youth and Purpose with Anthony Burrow, Human Development, Cornell

Ep. 5: Youth and Purpose with Anthony Burrow, Human Development, Cornell

In this episode Bronfenbrenner Center director Karl Pillemer talks with Anthony Burrow, assistant professor of Human Development, director of the Purpose and Identity Processes Lab, and co-director of the Program for Research on Youth Development and Engagement (PRYDE) at Cornell. Karl and Tony discuss the importance of purpose in the lives of young people and the ways that we can encourage youth connection to purpose for their own benefit.

13 Kesä 201617min

Ep. 4:  "Aging Is Not Dying" with Corinna Loeckenhoff, Human Development, Cornell

Ep. 4: "Aging Is Not Dying" with Corinna Loeckenhoff, Human Development, Cornell

In this episode Bronfenbrenner Center director Karl Pillemer talks with Corinna Loeckenhoff, associate professor of Human Development and director of the Laboratory for Healthy Aging at Cornell and associate professor of Gerontology in Medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College. Karl and Corinna discuss Dr. Loeckenhoff's research on aging and its effects on emotional and mental health, including the reminder that aging is not dying. They also talk about the new book "Emotion, Aging, and Health" (American Psychological Association), which expands on ideas explored in the 2013 Bronfenbrenner Conference. Corinna Loeckenhoff co-edited the book with Anthony Ong, also of the Department of Human Development at Cornell.

11 Touko 201618min

Ep. 3:  Andrew Turner, NY State 4-H Leader

Ep. 3: Andrew Turner, NY State 4-H Leader

In this episode we hear from Andy Turner, who heads the 4-H Youth Development Program in New York State. He talks with BCTR director Karl Pillemer about 4-H/Cornell connections and changes he sees that will keep 4-H at the forefront of youth development programming. Andy has over 25 years' experience in Cooperative Extension/4-H. Advancing environmental education and sustainability, and applying a facilitative leadership style towards organizational change and innovation are two consistent themes throughout his career. Andy earned his bachelor's and master's from Cornell University and his Ed.D in executive leadership from St. John Fisher College.

11 Huhti 201618min

Ep. 2:  Charles Izzo, research associate, Bronfenbrenner Center

Ep. 2: Charles Izzo, research associate, Bronfenbrenner Center

In our second episode BCTR director Karl Pillmer talks to Dr. Charles Izzo, a research associate in the BCTR studying the multi-level processes by which programmed interventions influence human functioning and health. His work focuses on factors that influence the quality of interactions between those in the helping professions (youth workers, home visitors) and the clients they serve, and translating research knowledge into useful tools for practitioners and administrators.

7 Maalis 201626min

Ep. 1:  Carol Devine, professor of nutritional science, Cornell University

Ep. 1: Carol Devine, professor of nutritional science, Cornell University

In this episode of Doing Translational Research, BCTR director Karl Pillemer interviews Cornell professor of nutritional science Carol Devine. Professor Devine studies how food choices over the life course are shaped by life transitions, social roles, and the lived environment.

2 Maalis 201616min

Suosittua kategoriassa Koulutus

rss-murhan-anatomia
psykopodiaa-podcast
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
rss-narsisti
psykologia
adhd-podi
aamukahvilla
rss-vegaaneista-tykkaan
filocast-filosofian-perusteet
rss-laadukasta-ensihoitoa
avara-mieli
dear-ladies
aloita-meditaatio
salainen-paivakirja
rss-lasnaolon-hetkia-mindfulness-tutuksi
rss-sisalto-kuntoon
leikitaanko-laakaria
rss-eron-alkemiaa
rss-turun-yliopisto
rss-the-deep-feminine-podcast