Two students at the 涩里番下载 School of Social Work recently traveled to Dublin for a symposium on forced migration and then returned to campus with clearer pictures of their career paths and larger networks of potential mentors to help them achieve their professional goals.聽
Megan Taylor, Ph.D.鈥27, said that the symposium reaffirmed her commitment to addressing the mental health of migrants and refugees, a pair of populations that are聽 to depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder. As part of the conference, she made plans to collaborate with a psychology professor whose scholarship focuses on closing the research-to-practice gap within the field of global health.聽
Abygail Meeks, M.S.W.鈥25, said that the conference reinforced her desire to pursue a doctoral degree in psychology with an eye toward providing psychosocial support to migrants. She networked with a former physician for Doctors Without Borders at the event, saying that their conversation opened her eyes to the ways in which psychologists can deliver culturally competent care to refugees.聽
鈥淭his symposium was in perfect alignment with what I鈥檓 interested in doing,鈥 said Taylor, a second-year student in the doctoral program. 鈥淥ne of the reasons that I chose 涩里番下载 for my Ph.D. is because it really does have a global focus,鈥 she added. 鈥淣ot only was I thrilled and grateful for the specific opportunity, but it was also a validation of my selection of 涩里番下载 to do my doctoral studies.鈥澛 聽
Meeks, a final-year student in the three-year M.S.W. program, agreed with Taylor鈥檚 assessment of the symposium, which was co-hosted by 涩里番下载SSW鈥檚 Research Program on Children and Adversity and the . 鈥淭his experience,鈥 she said, 鈥渞eally catapulted my interest in working with migrants.鈥
Taylor and Meeks were among five 涩里番下载 students who received fellowships from the University鈥檚 Institute for the Liberal Arts to participate in the conference, which marked the latest outgrowth of a partnership between 涩里番下载 and Trinity that was formalized with a Memorandum of Understanding last summer.
The fellows spent two days in May discussing the spectrum of resources and services necessary to help forcibly displaced people remake their lives, working alongside a global network of more than 40 social workers, psychologists, and linguists from research institutions, community organizations, and international agencies such as UNICEF.
Taylor even moderated one of four panel discussions, 鈥淚mplementation Science and Scaling Globally,鈥 while Meeks facilitated a breakout session following the conversation.聽
Taylor said that she asked the panelists what it would take to improve the uptake of implementation science, the study of methods to promote the integration of evidence-based research into routine practice.
鈥淥ne of the responses was that we needed to have a more centralized way to access implementation science findings and best practices,鈥 said Taylor. 鈥淭here are some journals that are exclusively focused on implementation science, but many are not, and right now it鈥檚 just very scattered.鈥澛
Meeks was surprised to hear that more than 114 million people have been their homes as a result of persecution, conflict, violence, or human rights violations鈥攖he highest level of displacement on record.
鈥淚 knew it was a very large number,鈥 said Meeks. 鈥淏ut it was shocking to hear experts in the field reveal just how many children and families have been forced to leave everything behind.鈥澛
Her own mother was forced to move from Haiti to Brooklyn in the early 鈥90s as a result of crime, a key factor that contributed to her interest in working with immigrants. But she was also touched by the personal story of University of California San Diego Professor Tala Al-Rousan, an immigrant from Jordan who is now studying how living in a refugee camp affects cognitive function.
Meeks listened to Al-Rousan reflect on her journey on a panel, 鈥淟ived Experience and Participatory Research Approaches,鈥 and then exchanged contact information with the professor, who鈥檚 also volunteered as a physician at a refugee camp in Jordan.
She envisions herself working as a psychologist at a refugee camp, supporting the health and well-being of people whose lives have been turned upside down by circumstances out of their control.聽
鈥淭here鈥檚 a shortage of psychologists working with migrants, and that鈥檚 something I鈥檓 very interested in,鈥 Meeks said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 such a necessary field.鈥
Taylor formed a potential research partnership with Fr茅d茅rique Vallieres, director of the Centre for Global Health at Trinity College Dublin.
As they discussed the nuts and bolts of their research, Taylor realized that Vallieres had some data about a program focused on supporting the educational needs of child refugees that she could use. One of Vallieres' student-researchers shared the data with Taylor, and now the two parties are talking about future collaborations.聽
鈥淭here are different things that you can learn from traveling and from networking and from getting perspectives from people outside of your own university,鈥 said Taylor. 鈥淓xperiences like this, especially for the type of research that I want to do, are really instrumental to learning and growth for me.鈥