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The
Gerontological Society of America Research, Education, Practice |
| For Immediate Release October 16, 2006 |
The Gerontological Society of America Awards New Hartford Doctoral FellowshipsEleven outstanding social work students have been chosen as the newest recipients of the prestigious Hartford Doctoral Fellowship, a program funded by the John A. Hartford Foundation, administered by The Gerontological Society of America, and directed by Dr. James Lubben. The following individuals will each receive a $50,000 dissertation grant plus $20,000 in matching support from their home institutions that will enable them to more fully concentrate on their dissertation research projects over the next two years:
This fellowship program is a component of the nationwide Geriatric Social Work Initiative, which seeks to expand the training of social workers in order to improve the health and well being of older persons and their families. It was created to help social work doctoral students overcome their greatest obstacles, such as limited teacher training and career guidance. These fellowships cultivate the next generation of geriatric social work faculty as teachers, role models and mentors for future generations of geriatric social workers. Lubben, the Louise McMahon Ahearn University Chair at Boston
College, works together with a national program committee, which plays
a role in selecting the Fellows. This board consists of Barbara Berkman
of the Hartford Faculty Scholars Program, Iris Chi of the University of
Southern California, Namkee Choi of the University of Texas at Austin,
Ruth Dunkle of the University of Michigan, Jan Greenberg of the University
of Wisconsin, Carmen Morano of the Hartford Pre-Dissertation Award Program,
Nancy Morrow-Howell of Washington University in St. Louis, Terry Singer
of the University of Louisville, and Deborah Waldrop of the State University
of New York at Buffalo. ### The Gerontological Society of America (GSA), founded in
1945, is the oldest and largest national multidisciplinary scientific
organization devoted to the advancement of gerontological research. Its
membership includes some 5,000+ researchers, educators, practitioners,
and other professionals in the field of aging. The Society's principal
missions are to promote research and education in aging and to encourage
the dissemination of research results to other scientists, decision makers,
and practitioners. The John A. Hartford Foundation, established in 1929, is a committed champion of training, research, and service system innovations that promote the health and independence of America's older adults. Through its grantmaking, the Foundation seeks to strengthen the nation's capacity to provide effective, affordable care to this rapidly increasing older population. |