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Vibiana
Bowman
bowman@camden.rutgers.edu
Vibiana
Bowman has been a Reference Librarian at the Rutgers-Camden Paul
Robeson Library since 1993. Currently also Web Administrator there,
Vibiana is responsible for bibliographic services in Art/Art History,
Childhood Studies, Education, Psychology, Religion/Philosophy, Honors,
and Teacher Preparation. She has published journal articles and
book chapters on a diverse array of topics, from plagiarism to virtual
libraries, from Lifetime television for women to global Barbie.
Her books include The Plagiarism Plague: A Resource
Guide and CD-ROM Tutorial for Educators and Librarians (Neal-Schuman,
2004) and Scholarly
Resources for Children and Childhood Studies: A Research Guide
and Annotated Bibliography (Scarecrow Press, 2007). She holds
a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies from Rutgers-Camden, a Master
of Library and Information Science from Drexel University, and
a Bachelor of Arts in Elementary Education from LaSalle College.
Vibiana currently serves as Vice President of American Association
of University Professors; as President of the American Library
Association Library Instruction Roundtable; as Chair of Children
and Childhood Studies in the Mid-Atlantic Popular/American Culture
Association; and as editorial board member for MP:
A Feminist Online Journal. In 2005, she was selected by Library Journal as
one of the "Library Movers and Shakers for 2005." Vibiana
is pursuing her PhD in Childhood Studies to explore the intersection
of children and popular culture, believing that popular culture is
a social, cultural, and political force which shapes the lives of
children and the concept of childhood.
Dianne
Fabii
dfabii@camden.rutgers.edu
Dianne Fabii is a licensed and nationally certified private practitioner
in Moorestown, NJ, providing career counseling and mental health services
to children and adults. She is also the guidance counselor for DeMasi
Elementary School in Evesham Township, where she counsels students,
develops programs, works with Child Study Teams, and trains teachers,
paraprofessionals, parents, and peer mediators. Dianne has also provided
counseling and career development services in a wide variety of settings,
including adult high school, universities, and individual companies.
In prior positions, she served as the Regional Director for the International
Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans, managing an extensive internship
program, and as Director of Career Development Services for Peirce
College in Philadelphia, where she managed cooperative education programs
and placement services. She also has experience with special education
programs. Recently, she created The Rose Foundation
for Children,
a non-profit organization that will be engaged in raising funds and
providing grants for needy children both at home and in India. Dianne
holds a Master of Science in Education and Health from St. Joseph's
University, and a Bachelor of Arts in Special Education and Music
from LaSalle University.
Her research interests in Childhood Studies stem from her charitable
work in southern India, where she has been involved for the last eight
years. She is curious about the influence of various dimensions of
culture on child development. She intends to comparatively study the
development and expression of emotional intelligence in Indian and
American children, focusing on which socio-cultural and economic factors
may influence the development of EI in children. Other areas of interest
include studying the educational, healthcare, and social welfare systems
that serve children in India, particularly children with special needs,
children victimized by HIV/AIDS, and children who have been abandoned,
orphaned, or otherwise deemed unworthy by virtue of the caste into
which they were born.
Thomas
Holmes
tholmes@rci.rutgers.edu
Thomas
Holmes is an ordained minister at the Ebenezer Baptist Church in
New Brunswick, New Jersey, where he is currently the youth pastor.
He holds a Masters in Public Administration from Rutgers-Newark in
the School of Public Affairs and Administration, a Masters in Divinity
from New Brunswick Theological Seminary, and an undergraduate degree
from Rutgers College. In New Brunswick, he founded and directed the
SOZO Health Ministry Team at Abundant Life Family Worship Church;
he also served as a member of the Community Health Advisory Group
of Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital (UMDNJ), a student chaplain
at St. Peters Hospital, and he is a strong health care advocate. His
passion for health ministry developed from his growing awareness
of health disparities among African Americans. While completing
his second masters, in Public Administration, his focus changed.
Thomas began to shift his focus to public policy and private sector
abuse, including equal educational opportunities for youth, as he
witnessed the atrocities experienced by Katrina victims. His current
research focuses on building "social capital" through nonprofit organizational
collaboration with social service providers, educators, parents, policy-makers,
and the community. Collaboration increases parental involvement and
academic achievement outcomes of adolescents at risk. As a founding
board member of the Doulos Agape Group, a non profit organization,
Thomas developed the planning model for their "Improve the Odds for
Children Project." The collaboration included the Asbury Park Middle
School Parent-Teacher Association, the Statewide Education Organizing
Committee, the Ministerial Alliance of Monmouth County, and the Asbury
Park Civic Participation Project. Thomas has written a grant proposal
for the project and plans to improve on this model as part of his
research here at Rutgers-Camden.
Diane
Marano
dimarano@camden.rutgers.edu
Diane Marano has been the Assistant Prosecutor with the Camden County
Prosecutor's Office since 1982, also serving as Section Chief of the
Juvenile Unit since 1985. As Section Chief, she serves as a trustee
of the Camden County Juvenile Aid Officers' Association; as a board
member of the Camden County Firewatch Program, a group that works
with juvenile firesetters; as chair of the Planning Committee of the
Camden County Youth Services Commission, and as member of the At-risk
Youth Council of the United Way of Camden County. She also served
as an instructor at the Camden County Police Academy, and at various
trainings through the New Jersey Attorney General's Office, the New
Jersey Institute for Continuing Legal Education (ICLE), which provides
continuing legal education for attorneys, and a Camden County Bar
Association training on juvenile practice. Diane holds a Juris Doctor
from Rutgers-Camden Law School and a Bachelor of Arts in History from
the University of Pennsylvania. For many years, Diane has mentored
Rutgers law students and interviewed high school students as part
of their applications to University of Pennsylvania. She has also
participated in the Hunter Moot Court Competition at Rutgers Law School
as a volunteer judge for the moot court arguments. She finds it inspiring
to continually work with students, as they are both enthusiastic and
creative.
Diane joins the Childhood Studies program at Rutgers-Camden with
an interest in and experience with juvenile justice issues. She is
curious about the resiliency of young people in challenged circumstances,
both in delinquent and non-delinquent populations. She would like
to do research following up outcomes for juveniles after adjudication
or waiver for homicide. She also maintains interest in gender-specific
issues, suicide, and juvenile victims of human trafficking. The Childhood
Studies program, in her view, is a way to broaden her interests as
well as cultivate her prior ones.
William
Marble
wmarble@camden.rutgers.edu
Currently Director of Early Childhood Education for the Gloucester
City School District, where he supervises all aspects of the Early
Childhood Program, William Marble has served as a professional educator
in a variety of capacities. He has been Assistant Principal, teacher
of science, and Director of the PreK-8 curriculum; in the latter capacity
he developed and coordinated curriculum with the four elementary districts
feeding Gateway Regional High School. From 2003-2006 he was the General
Management Chair for the New Jersey Science Convention. He holds a
Masters in Education from Wilmington College and a Bachelor of Arts
in History from Rutgers University in New Brunswick.
Having worked with children of all ages as teacher, coach, mentor,
and administrator, William has become intrigued by the way in which
student learning is impacted by social, cultural, economic, and societal
differences. He joins the Childhood Studies program to develop a comprehensive
understanding of childhood, especially outside influences on children,
for the purpose of improving educational practice.
Ines
Meier
imeier@camden.rutgers.edu
Ines Meier is currently the co-owner of Smart
Apple LLC, an educational
consulting business, where she supervises and trains staff to score
open-ended mathematics, science, writing, and reading tests for K-12.
She both develops tests for K-10 levels and manages personnel and
finances. Prior to her current position, she was the Administrative
Manager for Overseas Strategic Consulting, where she coordinated USAID
funded Public Education Programs, including establishing the non-profit
International Center for HIV/AIDS Communication. With an avid interest
in both children's health and cognitive development, she is currently
working on her Master of Arts in Psychology at Rutgers-Camden. Her
thesis investigates the role of emotions in public health messages.
If emotions can be viable motivators to specific actions, public health
messages could be tailored more efficiently toward their target groups.
Ines holds a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from Rutgers-Camden, and
has studied Communications and German Literature at Goethe Universitaet
in Frankfurt, Germany, herself a native of Germany. In 2006 she won
the Charles Kaden Memorial Award at Rutgers.
For her doctoral research in Childhood Studies, she is working with
the Technical University in Darmstadt, Germany to develop a collaborative
project. Her colleagues in Germany have implemented a philosophy for
children program with partnering schools. One program in particular, "Kant
for Children," utilizes Immanuel Kant's principal questions (such
as "Who am I?") to encourage children to think critically and independently,
as well as to improve their ability to formulate thoughts and enhance
learning skills. Ines seeks to further develop this program and implement
qualitative and quantitative measures for program evaluation. Not
only would she like to evaluate the impact of training in philosophical
thinking for grades 5 - 8, but she would also like to develop measures
that compare different education systems, thereby better assessing
this Kantian approach.
Marilou
Rochford
rochford@rce.rutgers.edu
Marilou Rochford is an Associate Professor with Rutgers University,
and family and community health sciences educator for Rutgers Cooperative
Extension (RCE). Marilou provides a comprehensive education and research
program for RCE, with an emphasis on human development, nutrition,
and food safety. She has created innovative programming that incorporates
nutrition and food safety training into parenting education classes.
She is nationally recognized for her work with children and fathers
("Me and My Dad"), and has also focused her efforts on grandparents
who are raising grandchildren, tackling bullying (youth violence),
and caring for the caregiver. In October 2004, she was named Parent
Educator of the Year by Parenting Press Magazine, and in 2007 she
earned the Distinguished Service Award from the National Extension
Association of Family and Consumer Sciences. Marilou holds a Master
of Arts in Educational Administration from Rowan University, and a
Bachelor of Arts in Home Economics Education from Montclair State
University.
Most recently, Marilou has spearheaded a major childhood obesity
initiative for Family and Community Health Sciences and Rutgers Cooperative
Extension. She developed, facilitated, and piloted the first Children's
Health Summit: Fighting Back Against Childhood Obesity. Under her
guidance, there have been eight more successful Children's Health
Summits across the state with two more planned for 2007 and 2008.
Since 2003, she has presented numerous papers on "Helping Kids and
Families Cope: Dealing with the Emotional Impact of Childhood Obesity
and Finding Workable Family Solutions." She hopes to expand this research
interest in the Childhood Studies program at Rutgers-Camden. Childhood
obesity is on the rise in this country and has been identified as
a major health threat in the US. As a result, there are tremendous
challenges facing children and their families. Parents have been identified
as key players, figuring largely in the solution to this problem.
Marilou is most interested in the social stigmatization of overweight
and obese youth, along with the role of the parent: how parents contribute
to the problem, how to address the issues surrounding this problem,
how these issues vary through history, and how arming parents with
knowledge may be the key to finding solutions.
Lara
Saguisag
malasa@camden.rutgers.edu
Lara Saguisag is the author of numerous picture books and poetry for
children, including Children of Two Seasons: Poems for Young People
(Anvil, 2007), Cat Eyes (Lampara, 2006), Tonyo's Wishes (Milflores,
2003), and There's a Duwende in My Brother's Soup! (Lampara, 2001).
She has also published literary criticism on children's books as well
as a translation of Bertday ni Guido (Lampara, 2001). With a particular
expertise in international children's literature, she has participated
in, presented papers at, and studied at several conferences concerning
the topic, including in Manila and London. She holds a Master of Fine
Arts in Creative Writing from The New School (New York), a Master
of Arts in Children's Literature from Hollins University (Roanoke,
VA), and a Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of Philippines,
where she also served for several years as an Instructor in the Department
of English and Comparative Literature.
As her creative work benefits from her research, she intends to
study the field of children's literature in the Childhood Studies
program. She is particularly interested in themes of subversion in
picture books, graphic novels, fantasy, and poetry for children. She
is also looking into attitudes toward consumerism and colonialism
in the institution of children's literature, wishing to examine how
consumer culture affects the creation and distribution of children's
books. Intrigued by the culture of childhood in her home country,
the Philippines, she hopes to research how the child is simultaneously
positioned as subject and reader in children's literature. She seeks
to eventually aid in the development of programs meant to make literature
more accessible to children in the Philippines. Thus the subjects
of media, poverty, and literacy will also feature in her research
agenda at Rutgers-Camden.
Deborah
Valentine
dvalenti@camden.rutgers.edu
Deborah Valentine comes to Rutgers-Camden from her recent position
as Research Associate at St. Joseph University's Child Development
Lab, where she designed and implemented methods to evaluate the United
Way Early to Learn School Readiness Initiative, assessing the effectiveness
of innovative methods for improving early childhood programs in the
Philadelphia region. In her prior positions, she planned curriculum
and trained neighborhood caregivers, teachers, and tutors; helped
implement the Keystone Stars Child Care Quality Initiative; directed
the Summit Children's Program in the Mount Airy neighborhood of Philadelphia;
and directed a satellite program of the Parent Infant Center located
in a West Philadelphia homeless shelter. A member of various associations
for the education of young children, she has presented trainings on
nurturing staff and on children at risk. She holds a Master of Arts
in Educational Ministries from Wheaton College, where she focused
her studies on urban and African American education and history, and
a Bachelor of Arts in Elementary Education, also from Wheaton.
Her research interests in Childhood Studies emerge from her experiences
with interventions that improve early childhood programs to better
meet the needs of children, staff, and parents, particularly in underserved
neighborhoods with non-majority cultures. While quality early childhood
environments are critical to all aspects of the development of children,
Deb is particularly interested in social and emotional development.
Factors such as gender, class, and cultural differences may impact
the quality of social-emotional care, especially for those who present
challenging behavior patters. She would like to engage in both continued
program evaluation and historical research as it relates to early
childhood, urban education, and African American history. What is
the historical basis of current practices and structures? Deborah
feels that answers to this question will serve as a foundation for
analyzing the effectiveness of current practices in contemporary contexts.
She also intends to circulate her research to the general public and
thereby increase community understanding of a field that has historically
been undervalued.
Marla
DeMesquita Wander
mwander@camden.rutgers.edu
An Adjunct Professor of Psychology at Camden County College, Marla
Wander teaches courses in Basic Psychology, Child Psychology, Developmental
Psychology, Educational Psychology, and the Psychology of Personality
and Adjustment. She has also consulted on the CLEP Human Growth and
Development Test administered by the Educational Testing Service,
and assisted with teaching Educational Studies and Psychology at both
the University of Delaware and Villanova. She has presented papers
and published articles on children's memory; recall of words, story
structure, and imagery; and structural level processing. She holds
a Master of Arts in Educational Psychology from the University of
Delaware, a Master of Science in Psychology from Villanova University,
and a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from Arcadia University.
She enters the Childhood Studies program at Rutgers-Camden with a
research interest in children's developing cognitive skills: their
reasoning, language, and judgment, as applied to life's events. She
intends to link cognitive and language competence with wellness-enhancing
interventions. How can children utilize their language and cognitive
skills proficiently in familiar or unfamiliar situations? In her prior
research, Marla investigated the way in which a story script can guide
children's understanding of stories. Can story scripts be developed
to support social skills in non-story situations? As she values socially
relevant research, Marla hopes to apply her research questions to
adolescents who are confronted by new situations and challenged by
life's transitions.
Caroline
Feliciano de Waters
cfeliz@camden.rutgers.edu
Since 1992, Caroline Waters has been a Senior Counselor for the Educational
Opportunity Fund Program at Rutgers-Camden, where she advises and
recruits students, supervises the transfer process, facilitates partnership
with state representatives and career planning services, and both
translates and assists with the transition process of Latina/o students
and their families. She thus brings to Childhood Studies fifteen years
of experience in both program administration and parent collaboration.
Before working with college students, she was a Case Manager for the
Reach Program in Camden, counseling and servicing Aid to Families
with Dependent Children (AFDC) recipients and their families in making
the transition from welfare to a work environment. In that capacity,
she also translated and referred clients to job training, financial
aid, ESL programs, childcare, transportation, and housing, providing
a liaison between clients and the Camden community. She holds a Masters
in Public Administration from Rutgers-Camden and a Bachelor of Arts
in Psychology, with a concentration on Early Childhood Development
and Human Sexuality, also from Rutgers-Camden.
She enters the Childhood Studies program at Rutgers-Camden with
an interest in researching how culture impacts the decision-making
processes of children, and in turn, how those decisions determine
the course of their lives in adulthood.
Nyeema
C. Watson
ncwatson@camden.rutgers.edu
Nyeema C. Watson is the Associate Director of the Center for Children
and Childhood Studies at Rutgers-Camden, where she works with faculty
across the disciplines to develop and execute projects and opportunities
for research exchange and outreach. She serves as campus-community
liaison for various projects from children's book author visits to
coordinating Childhood Studies conferences and speakers, and supervises
finances and donor relationships. She has been instrumental in building
the Childhood Studies academic program by coordinating faculty discussions
and curriculum design, marketing, hiring, and admissions.
She was
appointed by Governor Richard J. Codey and reappointed by Governor
Jon Corzine to the Camden City School Board where she has served for
the past three years. Previously was a career counselor at the University
of Pennsylvania before becoming a program development specialist at
the New Jersey Department of Education where she worked on policies
for afterschool programs in urban school districts and alternative
education programs. It was at the Department of Education where Nyeema
began to take an interest in policy development for programs and services
that impact minority, and low-income children. Nyeema holds a Bachelors
of Arts in Psychology and Afro-American Studies from Rutgers-Camden
and a Masters of Education from the University of Pennsylvania in
Psychological Services.
Nyeema is a native of Camden and enters the Childhood Studies Program
at Rutgers-Camden with an interest in researching images and representations
of minority children and how representations of minority children
impact education and social policy decision making.
Julie
Yankanich
kozempel@camden.rutgers.edu
After years of working as a freelance journalist, Julie Yankanich
settled at Camden County College as an assistant professor of English.
For the past four years she has served as the assistant chair of the
Reading and Writing Department where she is responsible for hiring,
observing, and scheduling over 90 adjunct professors each semester.
In 2006, Julie received a fellowship that allowed her to create an
experimental combination Reading and Writing course that will change
the structure of the basic skills courses at Camden County College
and at other community colleges. She recently presented a paper at
the New Jersey Association of Developmental Educators conference on
the Reading/Writing Connection and her research.
Julie teaches a course called Literacy in Today's World in the Elementary
Education Department at CCC and this year her education students voted
her keynote speaker for the Kappa Delta Pi National Honor Society
induction ceremony. As a journalist, Julies worked for local and national
magazines and newspapers, and was also a monthly columnist for Philadelphia
Style Magazine while working her way through two master's degree programs.
She holds a Master of Arts in the Teaching of Writing from Rutgers
University, a Master of Arts in Public Relations from Rowan University,
where she was also the graduate assistant for the Educational Leadership
Department, and a Bachelor of Arts in English from Rutgers-Camden.
With an interest in the connection between reading and writing for
all levels of learners, Julie enters the doctoral program in Childhood
Studies with an interest in children's literature and literacy practices,
seeking to study children's active interactions with texts, including
poetry and song.
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