Social Work Program鈥檚 Award-Winning Faculty


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Livingstone, Mitchell, Dupont
From left to right: Kimberly Livingstone, Alison Mitchell, Sara Dupont

The University social work program earned well-deserved recognition this spring with three faculty members receiving awards for teaching and service. The major鈥檚 program coordinator, Professor Kimberly Livingstone, has overseen its rejuvenation since joining PSU in 2017,

Less than a decade ago, the Maine native was helping to shepherd people experiencing homelessness in New York City toward permanent housing situations, imagining she would one day be an organization CEO. Then a peer got her interested in social research and policy, and Livingstone transitioned into macro-focused social work and higher education, accepting her first, full-time teaching position at Plymouth State and completing her social welfare dissertation simultaneously.

The program had dwindled to the point that Livingston was its sole faculty member in 2021. Now she and two colleagues have received major teaching awards, honors that came in part for garnering roughly $1.6 million in state and federal grants and championing the programs they funded.

Two social work students also received recognition this year, one as Outstanding Senior Student for highest GPA and the other for Outstanding Community Service.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a comeback story,鈥 Livingstone says. 鈥淲e鈥檝e come through a major transition in a difficult time. That is who we are as social workers. We鈥檙e called to task in times of crisis.鈥

Livingstone received the University鈥檚 Distinguished Scholarship Award, acknowledging the effort and outcomes of two programs, one that helps people at risk of experiencing homelessness and another serving youth and young adults with lived experience with homelessness.

Professor Alison Mitchell received this year鈥檚 Transformative Teaching Award. She has worked with preschool-aged children to older adults, specializing in adult women who have experienced interpersonal trauma(s), often in combination with substance use disorder, especially those recovering from opioid use disorder.

鈥淪he teaches in a way that makes you intrigued and excited for the future,鈥 says one of her student nominators. 鈥淪he transforms social work students into social workers.鈥

A third colleague, Professor Sara Dupont, received the Campus Compact for New Hampshire Presidents鈥 Good Steward Award. With a background volunteering within the corrections, probation, and parole system, Dupont is a strong advocate for social justice who connects her students with the important work of nonprofit partners.

Livingstone chose Plymouth State in part for its Clusters initiative, which is in line with social work as a discipline.  The program鈥檚 mission is to prepare students for the field in a way that鈥檚 rooted in the six core values of social work: respect for dignity and worth of a person, service, social justice, the importance of human relationships, integrity, and competence.

鈥淭he values are integrated in the content we present to students and ingrained in how we educate them,鈥 Livingstone says, adding the teaching aligns beautifully with the Cluster model鈥檚 Tackling a Wicked Problem and themed courses, Open Labs, and Integrated Capstone projects.

Student achievements illustrate the program鈥檚 success.

Rebekah Lewis 鈥23 was recognized in April for outstanding community service, and Chad Boxall 鈥23 for highest GPA and his successes in a 450-hour workforce development program supported by a grant partnership with the state Division of Children, Youth, and Families. Students selected for this program earn full tuition and work for DCYF for up to four years after graduation. As he begins his new job, Boxall will also begin work on a master鈥檚 in social work.

鈥淎ll the social work faculty come from different backgrounds in social work and bring with them first-class experience that helps each student learn,鈥 Boxall says. 鈥淟ikewise, students have different backgrounds and stories, and the faculty allow us to have our stories and use them to bring out the social worker inside ourselves.鈥

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