- M.A., Clinical Mental Health, Immaculata University
- B.S., Psychology, Drexel University
Department of Counseling, Human Development and Family Science
BIO
ShaRhonda C. Stevenson is a licensed counselor, counselor educator, and scholar. Her clinical and research interests focus on addressing systemic barriers to mental health with the goal to improve optimal wellbeing. Her areas of expertise include clinical rehabilitation counseling, African American mental health, and cultural competence.
ShaRhonda’s primary research goals involve the continuous understanding and development of culturally informed, evidence-based interventions guided by an understanding of health-related social determinants and their direct and indirect impacts, including natural and unintended consequences on the populations we serve. She has served as a member of the Innovative Partnership for Advancing Rehabilitation Research and Training
(IPARRT) with the University of Wisconsin-Madison for more than a year.
Over the trajectory of her career, she has worked with people across the lifespan with a disability. This includes people who have an addiction, children and teenager living in residential settings with developmental and behavioral disorders, recipients of Medicare/Medicaid, and families including teens in the judicial system.
ShaRhonda is working on her doctoral degree from Idaho State University. She also holds a Master of Arts in Clinical Mental Health from Immaculata University, and a Bachelor of Science in Psychology from Drexel University.
Bio
ShaRhonda C. Stevenson is a licensed counselor, counselor educator, and scholar. Her clinical and research interests focus on addressing systemic barriers to mental health with the goal to improve optimal wellbeing. Her areas of expertise include clinical rehabilitation counseling, African American mental health, and cultural competence.
ShaRhonda’s primary research goals involve the continuous understanding and development of culturally informed, evidence-based interventions guided by an understanding of health-related social determinants and their direct and indirect impacts, including natural and unintended consequences on the populations we serve. She has served as a member of the Innovative Partnership for Advancing Rehabilitation Research and Training
(IPARRT) with the University of Wisconsin-Madison for more than a year.
Over the trajectory of her career, she has worked with people across the lifespan with a disability. This includes people who have an addiction, children and teenager living in residential settings with developmental and behavioral disorders, recipients of Medicare/Medicaid, and families including teens in the judicial system.
ShaRhonda is working on her doctoral degree from Idaho State University. She also holds a Master of Arts in Clinical Mental Health from Immaculata University, and a Bachelor of Science in Psychology from Drexel University.