Since its establishment in the 1980s, has taken place each March to encourage the study, observance and celebration of women’s vital impacts on American history.
Such impacts are evident throughout ǿմý’s past and present, from the university’s origins as the Flora Stone Mather College for Women, to the efforts of today’s Flora Stone Mather Center for Women and student groups such as those in the Women’s Coalition. All can celebrate this month with resources and events from Kelvin Smith Library.
Read on to enjoy the final edition of The Daily’s highlighting some of the many women from across fields who help ǿմý excel.
Katherine Lewis (MSSA ’18, LSW)
Begun Center for Violence Prevention Research and Education
Research Associate
With over 10 years of experience in healthcare research and service evaluation, Katherine Lewis serves as a social worker with a clinical specialty in early intervention. Her interest in her field began when working with health and social care services in England, where she spent most of her adult life before earning her Master of Science in Social Administration from ǿմý as a Mandel Leadership Fellow.
Throughout her roles, Lewis has provided psychotherapy, therapeutic behavioral services and consultation to individuals, families, groups and service providers. She’s encountered many moments of feeling proud to be a social worker, including in a school-based position when she helped increase the family and school resources and skills of a 10-year-old client, allowing the student to feel safer and engage in more pro-social behaviors.
“Being a social worker means I can diagnose and treat a system as easily as I can a person, often with better results,” Lewis said. “I’m proud to be a change agent.”
Learn more about Lewis and her insights in a recent article celebrating World Social World Day.
Grace DiPierro
Master of Social Work Program
Graduate Student
After completing a Bachelor of Arts in psychology at the University of Dayton, Grace DiPierro set her eyes on ǿմý. Now, she’s applying what she’s learning in the Master of Social Work program at the Cleveland Clinic Taussig Cancer Center as an ambulatory/outpatient social worker as part of her field education practicum.
Prior to that position, DiPierro participated in a first-year field experience at Holding Space Psychotherapy, a private practice that offers mental health and counseling services. There, she observed therapists for a few months before taking on her own caseload of clients, working with those who struggled with anxiety, bipolar disorder and other mental health concerns.
DiPierro, who is expected to graduate in May, hopes to continue engaging with clients in a meaningful way by getting to know each person holistically.
“I think getting to know the whole person is an important part of good social work because it reminds us that while our clients are coming to us for help, they are more than their problems,” DiPierro noted. “Having a strong positive relationship with a client is sometimes more important than anything you’ll ever say or do.”
Megan Holmes
Center on Trauma and Adversity
Co-director and Professor
Recently named a 2024 Fellow of the Society for Social Work and Research, Megan Holmes boasts over 10 years of working in the field of child exposure.
Specifically, Holmes’ research interests include child maltreatment, sibling relationships and maternal parenting, early childhood development and intimate partner violence exposure. The overarching goal of her research is to contribute to the optimal development of children who have been exposed to domestic violence by identifying risk and protective factors that will be translated into interventions.
In addition to teaching course subjects such as women’s issues and theory and practice approaches in direct practice social work at the Mandel School, Holmes serves as a doctoral student mentor where she offers students opportunities to learn essential research and scholarship skills. Holmes is passionate about her ongoing work with doctoral and master’s students, and strives to develop their skills so they become productive independent scholars.
Holmes has also published three papers on her research for the HealthPath Foundation using her clinical experience with families from domestic violence households