Button to scroll to the top of the page.

News

 
Fatima Varner And Loraine Scott awarded The SSHD Erin Phelps award

Fatima Varner And Loraine Scott awarded The SSHD Erin Phelps award

Two members of the Human Development and Family Sciences community have been awarded the 2023 SSHD Erin Phelps Award. The recognition was awarded to Fatima Varner and Lorraine Scott in collaboration with HDFS alumna, Kathleen Holloway for their 2021 article entitled, "The roles of gender and parenting in the relations between racial discr...
Deborah Jacobvitz Named an Open Educational Resources Affordable Education Champion

Deborah Jacobvitz Named an Open Educational Resources Affordable Education Champion

MARCH 8, 2023 TEX LIBRIS LEAVE A COMMENTIn celebration of Open Education Week 2023, the Senate of College Councils, the Natural Sciences Council, and UT Libraries partnered to solicit nominations from students across campus to recognize instructors who increased access and equity by selecting free or low cost course materials for their classes. We'...
HDFS Researcher Honored with Early Career Award

HDFS Researcher Honored with Early Career Award

Nicole Perry, an assistant professor in the Department of Human Development and Family Sciences at The University of Texas at Austin, has been named the winner of the 2022 Victoria S. Levin Award. 

Bill Chopik Awarded Gerontological Society of America Award

Bill Chopik Awarded Gerontological Society of America Award

The Gerontological Society of America (GSA), the nation's leading interdisciplinary organization devoted to the field of aging, has named Bill Chopik among the outstanding award winners for the year, in recognition of his research on gratitude, aging and whether cultural experiences come into play.

The Richard Kalish Innovative Publication Award was awarded to Chopik for the article, "Grateful expectations: Cultural differences in the curvilinear association between age and gratitude." The award recognized insightful and innovative publications on aging and life course development in the behavioral and social sciences.

Stress Makes Couples Focus on Their Partner’s Worst Habits

Stress Makes Couples Focus on Their Partner’s Worst Habits

Stress can cause romantic couples to focus on their partner's most annoying bad habits, according to a new study from Lisa Neff, a University of Texas at Austin associate professor of human development and family sciences, whose work was featured in several prominent media publications.

he study was published in September in the journal Social Psychological and Personality Science.

"We found that individuals who reported experiencing more stressful life events outside of their relationship, such as problems at work, were especially likely to notice if their partner behaved in an inconsiderate manner," Neff said.