Congratulations to Lauren Forrest, our third recent recipient of the P.E.O. Scholar Award. Read more about Lauren here and thanks to April for her mentorship! Way to go REDS lab!
Tag Archives: award
Great news out of the Reds lab!
Some fantastic recognition for members of April Smith’s Reds lab, with an Article of the Year and a new graduate award! See the department’s Facebook page for more.
Congrats to our APAGS grant recipient!
Please join me in congratulating Selime Salim on her receipt of two research grants to support her research! She was selected for the 2019 APAGS research grant, awarded to only 9-12 graduate students nationally each year. She also received the Fall 2018 Student
Research Grant from the Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality, which includes an invitation to present the work at their annual meeting. Selime is mentored by Terri Messman-Moore, and describes her research as follows:
The funding will support a research project that aims to examine the relation between
sexual victimization and suicidality among bisexual women, given the elevated rates of
violence and negative mental health outcomes experienced by this population. Further,
the project will examine how experiences of anti-bisexual stigma may exacerbate
outcomes and lead to poorer post-assault recovery. The goal is to identify factors that
negatively impact bisexual women’s well-being in order to inform future prevention and
intervention efforts.
Outstanding job, Selime! We are proud of you and your important work on a population underrepresented in psychological science.
Graduate Teaching Award nominations sought
The Graduate School is now accepting nominations for the Distinguished Teaching Award for Excellence in Graduate Instruction and Mentoring. Our very own Jay Smart received the award this year, and I know we have many excellent faculty who contribute greatly to graduate education. Nominations are due by March 1; more information can be found in this doc on the Team Drive.
Reminder: USS due Feb. 1
Undergraduate Summer Scholars (USS) applications are due to Leanna on February 1. You can see the guidelines and application, or Allen’s email for more information.
Congrats to our Castellan Prize winner!
I am pleased to share that Mitch Dandignac received the 2018 Castellan Prize for the best student paper at the 48th annual meeting of the Society for Computers in Psychology (SCiP) in New Orleans. His topic was “Writing for Coh-Metrix: A Systematic Approach to Revising Texts to Foster Gist Inferences,” and he is advised by Chris Wolfe. Join me in congratulating Mitch!
Joanna Jackson Goldman Memorial Prize
From Pam Engel, on behalf of the National Fellowships committee, announcing the current cycle of Miami’s most significant award that would be suitable especially for honors theses:
The Joanna Jackson Goldman Memorial Prize will be awarded to current juniors/rising seniors to carry out a yearlong, independently-designed project in scholarship, journalism, or the arts. Recipients of the prize might use the stipend to compose music, write a work of fiction, conduct scientific or historical research, or gather material for a work on American civilization. The prize will support aspiring poets, writers, musicians, historians, social scientists, scientists, and artists who, as a result of their experience, will contribute more fully and richly to the community of scholarship and creative achievement that they will enter after their graduation from Miami. To be eligible for the award in this year’s competition cycle, you must be on track to graduate by May or August 2020.
The prize (up to $11,000) is awarded to current students of junior status (graduating May 2020) for a senior year project. The intention of the prize is to give students with exceptional promise the rare luxury of independently pursuing ideas and activities that will enrich their later work and careers. Funds can be used for travel, living expenses, supplies – essentially anything required to complete the project.
The Goldman Memorial Prize is open to any student, not just those in the Honors Program. We do ask that you send interested students to Old Manse to pick-up a paper copy application so we are able to monitor the number of students interested.
The application deadline is February 1, 2019.
Please contact Dr. Zeb Baker ([email protected]) or Pam Engel ([email protected]) with any questions.
Scholarship for women in STEM
The Science Ambassador Scholarship is a full-tuition scholarship for female undergraduates with STEM majors. Yes, Psychology majors are eligible since we are a science! Please consider encouraging talented female undergraduates to apply. The unique application process simply involves a three-minute video presenting on a topic about which they are passionate.
Congrats to our Psi Chi Junior Scientist!
Second-year graduate student Shelby Ortiz has been awarded the APAGS/Psi Chi Junior Scientist Fellowship! Shelby is working with April Smith to examine the relationship between stress, executive functioning, and overeating in those with varying levels of interoception. Please join me in congratulating Shelby for this prestigious award.
Celebrating graduate student awards

Several of our graduate students have received some notable recognition that I am proud to share! Feven Ogbaselase received a NSF Graduate Research Fellowship to support her work with Dr. Aaron Luebbe; Tony Drew received the College of Arts & Science Graduate Student Teaching Award for his work in PSY 293 (Mentor, Jay Smart); and Marie Parsons (Mentor, Elise Clerkin) and Dorian Dodd (Mentor, April Smith) received a P.E.O. Scholar Award. Join me in congratulating these deserving students.

