Sharon A. Bryant, PhD
Associate Dean, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion for the Decker College
Background
After earning her doctorate in medical sociology, Sharon Bryant spent two years as a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Gerontology and Health Care Research at Brown University. She conducted research applying the Transtheoretical model to screening mammography. When she finished her postdoc, she worked for two years as a health policy analyst in the Office of Minority Health at the Rhode Island Department of Health.
Bryant was an assistant professor in the Africana Studies Department of ßÙßÇÂþ»'s Harpur College of Arts and Sciences before transferring to the University's Decker School of Nursing (now Decker College of Nursing and Health Sciences). She is an associate professor in Decker's Division of Public Health.
She is also the project director/co-director of three grant-funded educational programs.
- The Collegiate Science and Technology Entry Program is funded by the New York State Department of Education to increase the number of college students to major in disciplines related to the licensed and STEM professions.
- The Science and Technology Entry Program is funded by the New York State Department of Education to increase the number of Johnson City School District middle and high school students who attend college and major in disciplines related to licensed and STEM professions.
- The Upward Bound Math Science Program is a TRIO program funded by the United States Department of Education to encourage ßÙßÇÂþ» High School students to attend college and major in STEM disciplines.
Bryant has led Decker College's diversity, equity and inclusion efforts since March 2019. She is now associate dean for DEI and serves on national, community and University committees addressing diversity, equity and inclusion.
Education
- PhD, medical sociology, Yale University
- MPhil, medical sociology, Yale University
- MA, medical sociology, Yale University
- BA, sociology, Howard University
Research Interests
- Health promotion and disease prevention behaviors of underrepresented populations
- Intimate partner violence among college students
Teaching Interests
- Health disparities and vulnerable populations