|
ArchivesSpring 2011Dan Baker, PhD, Co-Authors Disability Employment Report
The report, Ready and Able: Addressing Labor Market Needs and Building Productive Careers for People with Disabilities through Collaborative Approaches, describes market-driven practices that increase hiring, retention, promotion and accommodation of people with disabilities through partnerships with employers. Approaches profiled in the research include: collaborations between major national employers and public sector agencies; models that focus on an industry or occupational sector; private and “alternative” staffing services that place people with disabilities; partnerships that expand opportunities for college students and graduates with disabilities; and local and regional hubs that connect people with disabilities and employers. The research also profiles two organizations where lead disability and employment partnerships act as catalysts. View the the Ready and Able report View more information about The Boggs Center’s disability employment efforts The Boggs Center Interdisciplinary and Project Focused Trainees Graduate
Two students graduated from The Boggs Center's Interdisciplinary Traineeship Program. Matthew Hundemann, a MSW student at Rutgers School of Social Work, completed his field education placement at The Boggs Center and was supervised by Kathy Roberson, MSW, Policy and Information Coordinator. Allison Seebald, a student at Princeton University majoring in Molecular Biology with a certificate in Neuroscience, was supervised by Deborah Spitalnik, PhD, Professor of Pediatrics and Executive Director of The Boggs Center. A student from Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, David Chen, and a student from the Rutgers University, Justine Kim, graduated from the Independent Project Focused Traineeship Program. These students worked on projects mentored by The Boggs Center faculty. Jasmine Marwaha, a student at Rutgers University completed a Planning and Policy Internship at The Boggs Center this spring. The Interdisciplinary Traineeship Program is coordinated by Caroline Coffield, PhD, Instructor of Pediatrics.
Six students graduated from the 2010-2011 Clinical Pastoral Education Program, directed by Rev. Bill Gaventa, MDiv, Associate Professor of Pediatrics and Director of Community and Congregational Supports, and Alice F. Walsh, MDiv, ACPE Supervisory Candidate. The Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE) program is a training program initiated by The Boggs Center in collaboration with community agencies in New Jersey. This year’s students included: Janet A. Becker Halpren, Angela Brooks-Wright, Cheryl A. Daniel, Zacharias Abel Grant, Victoria McGrath, and Megan E. Thomas. Deborah M. Spitalnik, PhD, to be Appointed to the President's Committee for People with Intellectual Disabilities
The Boggs Center also congratulates the other appointees, including Sheryl White-Scott, MD, who teaches the Seminar on Developmental Disabilities and Family Centered Care for third year medical students at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. See the White House Press Release at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/05/10/president-obama-announces-more-key-administration-posts-5102011
Deborah M. Spitalnik, PhD, was honored with the Verice M. Mason Community Service Leader Award, one of the Edward J. Ill Excellence in Medicine Awards sponsored by MDAdvantage Insurance Company. The Verice M. Mason award is presented to an organization that demonstrates an extraordinary commitment to improving the health and welfare of the citizens of New Jersey and to an individual representing that organization who has personified, led and/or provided the vision for that organization. Dr. Spitalnik was presented with the award on behalf of The Elizabeth M. Boggs Center on Developmental Disabilities at the Edward J. Ill Excellence in Medicine Awards ceremony on May 4, 2011 in Lawrenceville, New Jersey.
|