• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Aggie Research Programs

Texas A&M University

  • Research Leadership
  • Undergraduates
  • Project List
  • Team Leader Resources
  • Contacts
  • Calendar
  • FAQs
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Fall 2021: Behavioral risk characteristics linked to vulnerable adolescent mental health outcomes

Affiliations:
Project Leader: Morgan Grant
mjgrant@tamu.edu
Health & Kinesiology
Faculty Mentor: Tamika Gilreath, PhD
Meeting Times:
W 2:00PM – 4:00PM
Team Size:
6
Open Spots: 0
Special Opportunities:
Students will be able to learn and hone the skills necessary to become successful graduate students in health and social science related fields. Prospective students will work with regional and national data as well as take part in study designs for health education projects. Opportunities will include earning co-authorship for publications, developing abstracts for and possibly attending professional research conferences, letters of recommendation, or becoming a member of our research group
Team Needs:
Skills and familiarity preferred with: critical reading and thinking, following directions and completing tasks independently, academic/professional writing, quantitative methods and analysis, detailed note taking, conducting literature searchers, reading and synthesizing information from the peer-reviewed literature, organizing and storing peer-reviewed literature in reference software (e.g., EndNote), data entry and management and related software (e.g., Excel, SPSS, etc.), statistical software packages (e.g., SPSS, SAS, STATA, MiniTab, etc.), and most important will be the desire to learn and apply what is learned from this experience to the student’s future endeavors
Description:
The project consists of examining behavioral risk factors that increase the likelihood of negative mental health outcomes in LGBTQ adolescent populations. The grad-student led project is a study that will use national data from the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance Survey (YRBSS) to analyze risk factors associated with adolescent mental health. Other research projects under Dr. Tamika Gilreath are examining risk in military-connected youth and Black American youth using novel statistical methods on secondary data from other regional and national data sets (e.g., YBRSS; CHKS)

Written by:
Andrew McNeely
Published on:
August 31, 2021

Categories: FullTags: Fall 2021

Footer

Texas A&M University  |  Web Accessibility  |  Site Policies  |  Site Support

© 2021, Website by CVMBS Communications, Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences