Funding is the Matter

STEM Identity for Black Female Undergraduates Attending A Historically Black College and University with Dr. Kalynda C. Smith

January 23, 2023 Sarah Michelle Lee Bartley Productions
STEM Identity for Black Female Undergraduates Attending A Historically Black College and University with Dr. Kalynda C. Smith
Funding is the Matter
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Funding is the Matter
STEM Identity for Black Female Undergraduates Attending A Historically Black College and University with Dr. Kalynda C. Smith
Jan 23, 2023
Sarah Michelle Lee Bartley Productions

Bio: Dr. Kalynda C. Smith earned a Ph.D. and an M.S. in Social Psychology from Howard University and a BA in Psychology and English from Truman State University. Dr. Kalynda C. Smith is a social psychologist with expertise in STEM education and identity development research. I am currently a Co-PI or investigator on several interdisciplinary NSF-funded STEM education research projects.

Source: 
Kalynda Smith, Barbara Boakye, Dawn Williams, Lorraine Fleming (2020). (The Exploration of how identity intersectionality strengthens STEM identity for Black female undergraduates attending a historically Black college and university.). (3) 88, pp. 407-418. Journal of Negro Education.


Follow the podcast on 

IG: @funding_is_the_matter

Twitter: @funds_do_matter

To subscribe to this podcast, you can find it on Spotify, Apple, or other podcast platforms. This is a bi-weekly podcast, and I will see you in two weeks. 


Show Notes

Bio: Dr. Kalynda C. Smith earned a Ph.D. and an M.S. in Social Psychology from Howard University and a BA in Psychology and English from Truman State University. Dr. Kalynda C. Smith is a social psychologist with expertise in STEM education and identity development research. I am currently a Co-PI or investigator on several interdisciplinary NSF-funded STEM education research projects.

Source: 
Kalynda Smith, Barbara Boakye, Dawn Williams, Lorraine Fleming (2020). (The Exploration of how identity intersectionality strengthens STEM identity for Black female undergraduates attending a historically Black college and university.). (3) 88, pp. 407-418. Journal of Negro Education.


Follow the podcast on 

IG: @funding_is_the_matter

Twitter: @funds_do_matter

To subscribe to this podcast, you can find it on Spotify, Apple, or other podcast platforms. This is a bi-weekly podcast, and I will see you in two weeks.