Student Fellowships
Melvin Hampton, M.Div.
- American Psychological Association’s Minority Fellowship Program
- Minority Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services Fellow
Fall 2008 – Summer 2011
Roy Jerome
- American Psychological Association’s Minority Fellowship Program
- Minority Mental Health and Substance Abuse Research Fellow
Fall 2005 – Summer 2008
Student Grants
Mathew Kiang
- Steinhardt Dean’s Grant for Student Research: A Study on the Relations Between Choice of Charitable Organization and Attitudes
Fall 2009 – Spring 2010
James Pollock, M.S.Ed.
- Steinhardt Dean’s Grant for Student Research: Project Strength: A Study of Virtues and Character Strengths and How They Relate to Behavioral Health in a Sample of Gay, Bisexual, and other Identified Men who have Sex with Men.
Fall 2009 – Spring 2010
Daniel Siconolfi
- Steinhardt Dean’s Grant for Student Research: Project BAR: Masculinity and Body Image among Gay and Bisexual Men.
Fall 2008 – Spring 2009
Robert Moeller, Ed.M.
- Steinhardt Dean’s Grant for Student Research: The Experience of HIV in the Lives of Young Gay and Bisexual Men. Fall 2007-Spring 2008
Michael Nina
- Steinhardt School of Culture, Human Development, and Education: 2006 Mitchell Leaska Dissertation Research Award. The relationship between ego functions and personality traits with drug of choice and degree of substance involvement among gay and bisexual male club drug users. Spring 2006
Student Awards - Publications
Sandra Kupprat, Alex Dayton, Andrea Guschlbauer, Preetika P. Mukherjee, & Nandini V. Pillai
- American Psychological Association (APA) Division 18: Psychologists in Public Service Award for Outstanding Student Research. 117th Annual APA Convention. Toronto, Canada.
- Case Management, Utilization, and Service Delivery Impact on HIV-Positive Women. Poster presentation at the annual American Psychological Association, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Joseph J. Palamar
- Goldmann Student Merit Award: Public Health Association of New York City.
- First Place Paper: Club Drug Use by MSM in New York City: Public Health Implications.