Bullying Prevention and Mental Health Promotion Lab

Lab Members

Dr. Cixin Wang

Cixin Wang
Dr. Cixin Wang is an Associate Professor of School Psychology in the College of Education at the University of Maryland, College Park (Department of Counseling, Higher Education, and Special Education). She received her Ph.D. in School Psychology from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 2011. She then completed a two-year postdoctoral fellowship at Kennedy Krieger Institute/Johns Hopkins University in 2013. Her research interests focus on bullying prevention and mental health promotion among children and adolescents. Her research seeks to: (1) better understand different factors contributing to bullying and mental health difficulties, including individual, family, school, and cultural factors; (2) develop effective prevention and intervention techniques to decrease bullying at school; and (3) develop school-based prevention and intervention to promote mental health among students, especially among culturally and linguistically diverse (CLD) students.
Bio photo

Diksha Bali

Diksha is a fifth-year in UMD’s School Psychology PhD program. Although her nuclear family is North Indian, she grew up in South India, in an interfaith monastery, and the UAE. She moved to Philadelphia to study for undergraduate degrees in Business and Creative Writing, and then her MS.Ed. degree in Quantitative Methods and Human Development (counseling concentration), all at the University of Pennsylvania. Her research breadth includes designing surveys to evaluate community programs; doing qualitative and quantitative work for community-based research projects; and analyzing large datasets such as the National Survey of Early Care and Education (NSECE) for policy decisions. While she has been doing school and community-based work since 2010, her current research and intervention interests include mitigating the links between inter- and intra-group conflict, mental health and social issues, via methods like community outreach, no-cost resource provision and facilitating intergroup dialogue. She strives to take a holistic, contextual and ecologically sensitive approach in her work, seeking to consistently grow and learn while centering others' needs. Her current grants and projects hopefully reflect this.

Finally, Diksha has been practicing meditation techniques, yoga asana, and Eastern philosophies, which are now used and studied as interventions in Psychology, since she was a toddler. She has facilitated conversations in the broader field of Psychology to help people talk more about the South and East Asian philosophies underlying many mindfulness-based practices popularized worldwide today. Being cognizant of the guiding philosophies, native practice indications and limitations of many mind-body techniques may help one increase one’s depth and breadth of study, practice and cross-cultural understanding, improving the holistic benefits one and others may receive. She wishes nothing but the best for everyone reading her profile here. She is happy to build partnerships with others around common interests and/or try to support other students in their graduate school journeys; please feel free to reach out on LinkedIn or via email whenever relevant. Please take good care.

Ja'Kala Barber

First-Year SP Doctoral Student

Ja'Kala is a second-year doctoral student in the School Psychology program at UMD. She received her B.A. in Psychology from UNC-Chapel Hill in 2021. After completing undergrad, Ja'Kala worked as a full-time Research Assistant in The Gaab Lab at Harvard Graduate School of Education. While at the Gaab Lab, she worked on several longitudinal studies examining the typical and atypical learning trajectories of children, with a special focus on reading and language development. Her research interests center around motivation, well-being, learning disorders, and the impacts these factors have on students from minoritized backgrounds. 

Sara Gliese

Sara Picture

Sara Gliese is a fifth-year doctoral student in the School Psychology program at UMD and will be going onto internship. Sara received her B.S. in Psychology from UMBC, and her Master’s in Clinical Psychology from UMD. Her research interests include youth mental health, parent-child communication, and peer relationships.

Mazneen Havewala

Mazneen Havewala Picture

Mazneen is a fifth-year in our School Psychology program and on internship this year with HCPSS. Mazneen earned her first Master’s degree in Clinical Psychology in 2008 in India, after which she worked as a Clinical Psychologist for two years. She moved to the United States in 2011, and got her second Master’s degree in Personality and Social Psychology from the American University, Washington, DC in December 2012, after which she worked as a research assistant in various capacities. In 2016, she started working at the University of Maryland, College Park (UMCP) as a research coordinator for Dr. Julia Felton for a study investigating the effects of distress tolerance and daily life stressors on internalizing symptoms in adolescents.  She then worked as a clinical interviewer for the Temperament Over Time Study in Dr. Nathan Fox’s Child Development lab.  She is very interested in studying the effects of parental influences and culture on child development, with a specific focus on child and adolescent internalizing symptoms.

Janisa Hui 

SP student

Janisa Hui is a fifth-year doctoral student in the School Psychology program and will be going onto internship. Janisa earned an Ed.M. in Human Development and Psychology from the Harvard Graduate School of Education in May 2018. Prior to joining UMD, she served as a research assistant for the Harvard Caregiver Reported Early Development Instruments (CREDI) team, studying caregivers' understanding of infants' socioemotional development and mental health in both developed and developing countries. She also worked with Dr. Nutsa Kobakhidze from the University of Hong Kong to investigate the competitive education market related to kindergarten admission. This study demonstrated the pressure to succeed in early life and that there is an implication on stress and well-being for both parents and young children. Janisa's research interests center around early childhood mental health, parenting, coping and socialization strategies in different contexts, and culturally-informed interventions.

Ami Patel

Third Year SP Doctoral Student

Ami Patel is a fourth-year doctoral student in the School Psychology program at UMD. Ami received her B.S. in Psychology from Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) in 2015 and her Master’s in Counseling Psychology from Temple University in 2017. Upon graduation, she worked as a Clinical Research Coordinator at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) on IES and NIMH-funded research grants focused on anxiety mental health interventions in schools as well as organizational skills training (OST) for those with executive functioning difficulties. Ami is interested in the cultural adaptation and cultural responsiveness of mental health interventions and social-emotional learning both in schools and in the community, particularly for Asian American students/families.

Romy Stancofski

First-Year SP Doctoral Student

Romy is excited to be a third-year doctoral student in the School Psychology program at UMD. Romy received her B.A. in Psychology and Speech, Language, and Hearing Science from the George Washington University in 2018. In 2020, she received her M.A. in Psychology from American University, where she studied the relationships between mindfulness, body image, and self-worth. Following the completion of her M.A., she worked in a special education program as a paraeducator in a preschool classroom before starting at UMD. Her research interests include youth mental health, social-emotional learning, and the school experiences of Arab American children and families.

John Seipp

SP Student

John Seipp is a first-year doctoral student in the School Psychology program at UMD. John received his B.A. in Psychology and Public Health at American University in Washington, D.C. in 2021. Upon graduation, he worked as a research associate on an IES grant-funded project at Ohio University focused on culturally responsive teaching practices and classroom behavior management. John is interested in school climate, youth mental health, and the experiences of Asian American students and families.

Xinyi Zhang

Xinyi Zhang Photo

Xinyi Zhang is a fifth-year doctoral student in the School Psychology program at UMD and on internship this year with PGCPS. She earned her Master of Education in Human Development and Psychology from Harvard Graduate School of Education. She received her undergraduate education from the University of Hong Kong and Yale University (as a visiting international student). Her research interests include cross-cultural parenting and youth mental health. She is currently working on a project looking at ethnic-racial socialization among Chinese Americans.   

Jessica Momanyi

Picture of Jessica Momanyi (she/her), smiling

Jess (she/her) is thrilled to be a first-year doctoral student in the School Psychology program at UMD. Jess is a Kenyan-American born and raised in New Jersey. She received her B.A. in Psychology in the Cognitive Science Honors Track with a minor in Classical Voice at William Paterson University (WPU) in Wayne, New Jersey in 2024. During her undergraduate studies, Jess completed a Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) at University of Nebraska - Lincoln in Engineering Education. Her work focused on changes in instructor facilitation of learning communities in university engineering classrooms before, during and after the Covid-19 pandemic. This experience inspired her to amplify the voices of her own community in the music department at WPU, culminating in an Honors Thesis that qualitatively analyzed the attitudes of university music students and faculty towards individual function, academia, and community post-Covid-19. Jess's research interests include systems of support in university music education, African and Black American students in the public school system, factors that affect accessibility to mental health resources and visibility of school psychologists in the public school system, and applications of global school psychology in Sub-Saharan Africa.