Five CBCS ÅÝܽÊÓƵapps were selected as recipients of the Sarasota-Manatee campus Trailblazer Graduate Student Research Scholarship Program. The Trailblazer Research Scholarship Program supports training through mentored research experiences for masters and doctoral level ÅÝܽÊÓƵapps.
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Bilali and Smith celebrate their achievements at a recent luncheon hosted by USF Research.
Second-year criminology PhD ÅÝܽÊÓƵapp Klejdis Bilali, MA, first-year PhD ÅÝܽÊÓƵapp Katelyn Smith, MA, and master's ÅÝܽÊÓƵapp and School of Aging Studies office assistant Sayla Victores received the award. Bilali’s research focuses on interpersonal violence and victimization, including human trafficking.
The Trailblazer Research Scholarship will fund a project dedicated to the development and administration of a statewide victimization survey which will provide more precise prevalence rates of human trafficking in the state of Florida. Through this project, Bilali will collaborate with two faculty members from the USF Trafficking in Persons Risk to Resilience Lab, Professor Joan Reid, PhD, and Associate Professor Fawn Ngo, PhD.
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Victores’ master’s thesis bridges the fields of criminology and gerontology.
Smith’s research focuses on technology-facilitated crime and deviant online communities. Smith will collaborate with assistant ÅÝܽÊÓƵapps C. Jordan Howell, PhD, and Roberta O’Malley, PhD, on a project exploring the behaviors of the incel community, specifically how online radicalization and extremism translate into online and offline forms of violence.
Victores’ master’s thesis bridges the fields of criminology and gerontology as she seeks to find if there is an association between the coping mechanisms that older incarcerated adults employ and their mental well-being. Victores is mentored by Associate Professor Jessica Grosholz, PhD.
Sarah Bochat, AuD, a PhD ÅÝܽÊÓƵapp in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, was also selected as a recipient of the research scholarship. Bochat's current research involves measuring physical activity and function in adults with hearing loss and evaluating changes in physical outcomes with best-practice hearing intervention.
Behavioral and community sciences doctoral ÅÝܽÊÓƵapp Kelsey Greenfield, JD, was also selected. Her research focuses on the intersection of behavioral health and criminal justice and community-based intervention programs as a method of reducing recidivism in the justice-involved population with co-occurring disorders.