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Joseph P. Ryan
, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the School of Social Work and a Faculty Fellow with the Children and Family Research Center at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Dr. Ryan received an MSW from the University of Michigan and a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. Dr. Ryan's research focuses on families entangled with the public child welfare system and at least one other social service context (e.g. substance abuse, juvenile justice). He is currently the principal investigator on several longitudinal studies including Illinois Alcohol and Other Substance Abuse (AODA) Waiver Demonstration and a study of maltreatment and delinquency in Los Angeles County.
Contact: jpryan@uiuc.edu
Webpage: UIUC School of Social Work



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Rosie Gianforte
, MA is the project director for the AODA waiver demonstration. Rosie is an LCSW and a graduate from the Social Service Administration from the University of Chicago. Rosie has 19 years experience working in the social service field, including the areas of school social work, partial hospitalization care, and child welfare. For the past ten years, Rosie has worked collaboratively with child welfare projects and substance abuse treatment providers serving at risk DCFS involved families. Rosie is currently serving as the Coordinator of the IV-E AODA Waiver Project awarded to the Illinois Department of Children Family Services, Division of Service Intervention.   Email:
Rosie.Gianforte@illinois.gov


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Sam Gillespie is the Alcohol and Other Drug (AOD) Services Administrator for the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services in the Service Intervention Division.  He has worked for DCFS since 1998. Prior to that he held numerous administrative, programmatic, and research positions with the Illinois Department of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse, since that Department's creation in 1984. He has also worked for the Illinois Department of Human Services and the Department of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities.
Email:
Sam.Gillespie@illinois.gov


Jeanne C. Marsh, Ph.D. is the Dean and George Herbert Jones Professor in the School of Social Service Administration at the University of Chicago. Her fields of special interest include services for women and families, substance abuse, mental health service delivery, social program and policy evaluation, and knowledge utilization in practice and program decision making.
Contact: jmarsh@uchicago.edu
Webpage:
http://www.ssa.uchicago.edu/faculty/j-marsh.shtml



Sam Choi
, Ph.D. is currently a post-doctorate scholar at the School of Social Service Administration at the University of Chicago. Originally from South Korea, she received her M.S.W. from Ohio State University. After obtaining her M.S.W., she worked as project director at Asian American Community Services, Columbus, OH and ran two federal funded family violence projects - Asian Women Advocacy (AWA) project and Asian American Family Employment (AFEI) project. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (U of I) in 2006. While at Illinois, she was involved with the AODA project as a research assistant/data analyst. Her dissertation Case Management and Matched Services for Substance Abusing Mothers With Co-Occurring Problems in Child Welfare: A Study of Service Effectiveness With a Randomized Trial; was a part of a large research evaluation effort of the AODA project and she received the Doctoral Fellows Award from the Society of Social Work Research in 2006.  Email: samchoi@uchicago.edu


Pedro Hernandez, Ph.D. is a Research Specialist at the Children and Family Research Center at the University of Illinois. He completed his Ph.D. in Family and Consumer Economics (i.e., Human Resources and Family Studies) in 1996 at the University of Illinois, and last December (2006) completed his M.S.W. degree, specializing in advocacy and policy in social work at the same university. For the last 20 years, he has been involved in research related to: family economics, consumer economics, educational economics, family demographics, population demographics, social demographics, school demographics, sociology of education, and social stratification. He has been a NIH Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Office of Population Research, Princeton University, NJ, as well as a Post-Doctoral Research Associate at the Center for Demography and Ecology and the Institute for Research on Poverty at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI. Currently at the Children and Family Research Center, he has been involved in an evaluation of the Title IV-E Waiver to improve reunification and other family permanency and safety outcomes for foster children from drug-involved families.  Email: pedromh@uiuc.edu


Jane Marie Marshall, MA brings a background in psychology and social work to her research on child maltreatment and juvenile delinquency. She is currently working toward her doctorate in Social Work at the U of I under the guidance of Joseph Ryan, Ph.D. Until 1999, Jane worked with children and adults with emotional and behavioral difficulties in both Massachusetts and France.  While working at the University of North Carolina in 2001 and 2002 as a research assistant for the Consortium for Longitudinal Studies for Child Abuse and Neglect Project (LONGSCAN Project), Jane received an introduction to the study of child maltreatment. She visited child protective agencies throughout the state of NC to collect data from child abuse and neglect records. Jane continued her affiliation with the LONGSCAN Project while completing her Master’s degree, which focused on mental health service receipt in a sample of maltreated children at San Diego State University. Jane’s prior work and research experiences have led to her commitment to advocacy for economically and socially disadvantaged children and their families through her research efforts. She works from the world view that perceives children’s social environments as being critical to their coping styles as adults. Currently, she is engaged in research projects that reveal how social, economic, and legal intervention environments relate to children’s risk for becoming involved with the child protective and juvenile justice systems.  Email: jmarsha3@uiuc.edu


Jun Sung Hong, MSW is a first year Ph.D. student in the School of Social Work at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He completed his M.S.W. at the University of Michigan. His research interests include: externalizing disorders of youth/adolescents; educational outcomes of at-risk youth exposed to violence at home/in school (e.g., bullying/aggression) and mental health of adolescents exposed to parental substance abuse.  Email: jhong23@uiuc.edu 



Hui Huang,
MA is a first year Ph.D. student in the School of Social Work at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Hui received her bachelor degree in social work from Xiamen University (China) in 2004. She subsequently earned her MA in 2007 from Xiamen University. Hui has three years of experience as an extracurricular counselor in an elementary school. Her practice background is reflected in her research interests. Her research interests include: Children and Families, Crime and Violence in Schools, Mental Health of Children and Adolescents, Discrimination and Inequality Issues, Social Support, Cultural Diversity and Social Work Practice. Email: hhuang33@uiuc.edu


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