ACADEMIC STATEMENT OF PURPOSE:
The main focus of my study at Michigan State University will be health, aging, and the life course with an emphasis on cognition. The Western Michigan University Comparative Religion Program had a department chair enamored with cognition during my undergraduate tenure there. I was influenced greatly by Dr. E. Thomas Lawson’s worldview and immeasurably impressed that he provided his time to sit with me during my first semester to discuss my academic future. He personally guided me to a bachelor’s of arts in comparative religion, with a double major in philosophy, including a concentration on professional ethics.
It was a multidimensional tract that possessed the subject of religion, and through critical thinking, I was able to synthesize and apply my learning to courses on subjects like desire and belief. Social and biomedical ethics were practical courses where I could apply my knowledge to specific situations. I carried over the theme of applicatory education to my graduate work in public administration. I will always recall sitting in Dr. Rudolf Siebert’s “Religion In Revolution” class on September 11, 2001. It was then that I realized I was not simply studying world religions, but also the governments, history, sociology, and social structures that combine to form nations. This coursework and academic process has prepared me exceptionally well for graduate study at Michigan State University.
I would like to work with Nan Johnson because I an interested in specializing in aging and the life course, rural sociology, and research methods. I see interrelationships with patients, families, and caregivers, and older-adult migration between rural and metropolitan counties daily at my work with hospice.
I am also encouraged by Stan Kaplowitz’s specialization in social psychology, especially of attitudes and communication. Communication is a big piece of our hospice volunteer training at McLaren Visiting Nurse and Hospice. Mr. Kaplowitz’s view of cancer patients’ desires for communication of prognosis information will enhance my ability to work within hospice with patients of similar diagnoses.
Brown University’s Sociology program really appeals to me and I hope that Maryhelen MacInnes’s training from that department will carry over to instruction at Michigan State. The research areas of health and illness, disability, family studies, and demography are fascinating to me. The impact of illness and disability on family form and function is something I would like to study. I would be interested in taking her course(s) in family and medical sociology.
Alesia Montgomery’s research and outreach related to K-12 and adult education, school-to-work transitions, work/family issues, transnational networks, and “virtual” communities are all subjects that apply directly to my non-profit OMIA Foundation that enhances the lives of children by expanding the scope of learning. The interplay of “virtual” communities amongst K-12 teachers and administrators can broaden curriculum.
Aside from the OMIA Foundation, my previous research on charter schools as a student at Central Michigan University has assisted my exploration on how and why (and at what costs to families and communities) middle class black parents navigate metropolitan areas to find beneficial settings for their children. My previous research in that area included new methods by which music can be used to diversify education rather than simply the migration of minorities to other schools within or outside respective districts.
I would like to study with Harry Perlstadt to learn how he views medical sociology, health care delivery, evaluation research and organizations/occupations. His research on international, federal, state and local agencies and private foundations apply directly to my interest of effective public policy. Community health delivery, health education, substance abuse and violence prevention are vital areas of research that apply directly to the formation of solid public policy. My experience with the HIV/AIDS Prevention and Intervention Services (HAPIS) office within Michigan’s state government coincides with an interest in Mr. Perlstadt’s HIV-AIDS research.
I am interested in Barbara Schneider’s joint appointment in educational administration and sociology. Her research focus on how the social contexts of schools and families influence the academic and social well-being of adolescents as they move into adulthood can be directly applied to my work with the OMIA Foundation. Her research on how schools can become more effective in reducing persisting academic achievement gaps among children of different racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic backgrounds not only can enhance the function of the OMIA Foundation, but is directly related to my graduate paper “Music In Classrooms Increases Diversity.” I share concern with Ms. Schneider on issues of social justice and inequality. I would like to have a discourse with Ms. Schneider about her understanding of societal conditions and interpersonal interactions that create norms and values that enhance human and social capital.
I would call on Dr. Zhenmei Zhang’s expertise of life course and aging, family and health, and social demography. Dr. Zhang’s focus on the effects of social relationships (parental and marital history) on both physical and mental health in later life and the role of gender in moderating the impact of social relationships on health is something I would delve into while at Michigan State University. Her research of racial/ethnic differentials in a variety of health outcomes, including chronic health problems, functioning problems, and active life expectancy is something that applies directly to my work at hospice. I share her interest of how socioeconomic status over the life course contributes to racial/ethnic health disparities. That is something I see at hospice and would like to study at Michigan State University. My cognitive theory studies at Western Michigan University would help me grasp and expound upon Dr. Zhang’s investigations of the risk factors of cognitive impairment among the aged population in China. I would focus on the elder population in the United States.
I need to enhance my comprehension of issues within my current employment at hospice. I would like to study sociological phenomena and theories at Michigan State University because I believe that such research would assist me to accomplish my career goals. My intellect can only grow while at Michigan State University.
I have studied sociological topics like gender, women, and health previously within my course work research of comparative religion. An interdisciplinary examination, through the Sociology graduate program at Michigan State University, would increase my knowledge of vital sociological theories exponentially.
I witness conflict in end of life decisions on a daily basis. I can either continue to do so with my current skill set, or continue to grow at Michigan State University and better approach situations within my employment at hospice.
My vocational and educational focus has been the life course and I understand the connection between early childhood education and subsequent life results. I would like to examine aging, the life course, and elder sociology more in depth at Michigan State University. I believe it would benefit my performance at hospice, my knowledge of important subject matter, and my peers and instructors in the Department of Sociology at Michigan State University.
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