IPPA Award Winners 2021

Image of Liz Corcoran

James O. Pawelski Positive Catalyst Award

The James O. Pawelski Positive Catalyst Award is presented to an IPPA member who:

  • Advances change for the Association
  • Has committed their service to IPPA for a sustained period of time
  • Has mobilized and catalyzed others to contribute to IPPA
  • Has Helpted to build and contribute to the IPPA community
  • Can show concrete outcomes and impact for the Association based on their efforts

Liz Corcoran
Impact Performance Group

She has been a member of IPPA for over 10 years. Liz has attended five World Congresses. She has served as a World Congress volunteer.
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Inspired by the work of Tal Ben-Shahar and Marty Seligman, Liz has been incorporating positive psychology into her customized communication skills training solutions in her current job as Senior Vice President and Principal of Impact Performance Group, Inc. Liz specializes in research, program design, and development of solutions that enable organizations to deepen client relationships and ignite employee engagement. Over the past nineteen years, Liz has worked extensively with Fortune 500 companies to enhance sales productivity, increase service effectiveness, and enable leadership and coaching skills in financial markets, manufacturing, healthcare, and retail industries. Her consulting engagements involve in-depth exploration of current sales process and practices, performance enhancement opportunities, and strategic interventions that achieve tangible returns on investment. Liz brings a wealth of experience, creativity, and energy to the team. Her designs integrate emotional intelligence and positive psychology into all communications skills processes. Liz specializes in C-suite conversations to execute strategy by leveraging an organization’s greatest asset of its people to differentiate itself in the marketplace.

Liz is also an active member of Association of Training and Development(ATD). She holds a Bachelor’s of Science in Marketing from Boston College and a Masters of Business Administration from New York University in Finance and Accounting. She resides in Wellesley, Massachusetts with her husband, Joe, and her three children. Her son Connor is an IPPA member.

Image of Ed Diener

Christopher Peterson Gold Medal

The Christopher Peterson Gold Medal honors an IPPA member who exemplifies the best of positive psychology at the personal, professional, and academic levels. This award is named after Christopher Peterson, a beloved IPPA Fellow, professor, scholar and pioneer in the field of positive psychology. Peterson’s many scholarly contributions include his work on the character strengths and values classification and assessment with Martin Seligman. On a personal level, Peterson was known for his sincerity, humility, integrity, sense of humor and generosity.


Ed Diener

Ed Diener was the first president of the International Positive Psychology Association.
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Although the modern positive psychology movement was young, Ed’s presidency occurred decades into a well-established career. With approximately 400 publications and more than a quarter-million citations, Ed Diener was among the most highly cited scientists in history, across all disciplines. His pioneering research on subjective well-being helped lay the scientific foundations for positive psychology. It is hard to emphasize enough the courage it took for Ed, in the early 1980s, to study a topic that was widely dismissed as frivolous. Across four decades, Ed and his research collaborators explored a wide range of questions relating to happiness: its measurement, its effects on health, its relation to income, its cultural variations, its causes, and many other topics.

Ed was also a dedicated teacher, known equally for his love of data and his quirky sense of humor. Undergraduate students at the University of Illinois, where Ed taught from1974 to 2008, will recall him dressing as Mephistopheles in a skit in which he tried to coax professor Diener into taking “happiness shortcuts.” His students at the MAPP program at the University of Pennsylvania will remember how animated he became when he discussed tables and figures of data. His graduate students will remember him for his excellent mentorship and generosity with authorship. His family members will recall that he was not only a husband and father but also a frequent collaborator—having published 30 times with his wife and children.

Finally, Ed exemplified so many of the concepts that are at the heart of positive psychology. He was intellectually humble and he spoke to colleagues and laypeople with respect. He was generous, funny, creative, and hardworking.

Image of Jenny Brennan

Raymond D. Fowler Service Award

The Raymond D. Fowler Service Award honors an IPPA member who has gone above and beyond to give his or her time in the service of advancing the field of positive psychology. The award is named after a dear colleague and IPPA Fellow, Ray Fowler, whose generosity and vision catalyzed the creation of IPPA back in 2007.


Jenny Brennan
Ardent Wellbeing, LLC

Jenny has served the IPPA community since 2013, when she collaborated with Giselle Timmerman, Reb Rebele, and others to help launch IPPA’s professional Divisions Program.
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In the years since, she has contributed to IPPA’s growth by recruiting members, managing strategic initiatives, producing member programming, and establishing opportunities for hundreds of volunteer leaders to advance the field through IPPA. She currently supports efforts to bridge research and practice and develop professional guidance for practitioners as a member of IPPA’s Council of Advisors. As the founder of Ardent Wellbeing, she helps nonprofit and government organizations engage stakeholders and craft policy that supports individual and collective well-being. She wishes to thank IPPA’s Board of Directors and volunteer leaders, past and present, especially James Pawelski, Leona Brandwene, David Pollay, Lea Waters, Carmelo Vazquez, and Tayyab Rashid, for the tremendous honor of serving with them on such a worthy mission.

 

Image of Margarita Tarragona

Outstanding Practitioner Award

The Outstanding Practitioner Award honors an IPPA practitioner who has shown the most outstanding excellence and impact in advancing the practice of positive psychology in ethical and evidence-based ways.


Margarita Tarragona
PostiviaMente

Dr. Margarita Tarragona applies positive psychology in education, psychotherapy and coaching.
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She is Professor of the Practice and Director of the ITAM Center for Wellbeing Studies at the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México, in Mexico City. She created the first university-based positive psychology program in Spanish in 2008 at the Universidad Iberoamericana, and was the founding director of the Instituto de Ciencias de la Felicidad at Universidad Tecmilenio. She is a lecturer for the University of Pennsylvania´s LPS Online Certificate in Applied Positive Psychology, for which she has designed three positive psychology courses.

Margarita has been on the faculty of graduate programs in Family Therapy and in Counseling and is a co-founder of Grupo Campos Elíseos, a training institute for psychotherapists. She is the president of the Mexican Positive Psychology Society, is on the board of advisors of IPPA, and is a member of the leadership team of IPPA´s Clinical Division, where she leads a monthly peer consultation group for psychotherapists.

Margarita is the author of Positive Identities: Positive Psychology and Narrative Practices. An eight-week online workshop based on this book was empirically shown to increase well-being and reduce burnout during the Covid19 pandemic. Margarita also loves the diffusion of positive psychology and hosts the podcast Psicología y Felicidad.

 

 

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Early Career Researcher Award

The Early Career Researcher Award honors an IPPA member who, within the first 10 years of completing their PhD, has contributed most significantly to scientific advancement of knowledge in positive psychology.


Johannes Eichstaedt
Stanford University

Johannes obtained his Ph.D. from the University in Pennsylvania in 2017, and is now at Stanford as an Assistant Professor in psychology and a Shriram Fellow at the Institute for Human-Centered A.I.
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Johannes is a computational social scientist focused on measuring and characterizing health and well-being from social media, and on introducing AI-based text analysis to the social sciences. Ten years ago, he co-founded the World Well-Being Project, then a research group dedicated to measuring the subjective well-being of large populations through social media.

Johannes’ papers have accrued over 5,000 citations across more than 50 publications.

In 2020 johannes and his team published a paper in PNAS that benchmarked and validated different methods of measuring subjective well-being from social media. These results have become the basis for big data measurement of the subjective well-being of populations.

Johannes has presented his work in the United Nations General Assembly and at the OECD World Forum and has been elected as an Emerging Leader in Science & Society by the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Johannes’ work has been featured in over 100 articles in the international press, with 3 articles in the New York Times in 2020 alone.

Image of Eric Kim

Early Career Researcher Award

The Early Career Researcher Award honors an IPPA member who, within the first 10 years of completing their PhD, has contributed most significantly to scientific advancement of knowledge in positive psychology.


Eric Kim
University of British Columbia

Eric Kim is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at the University of British Columbia.
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He received his Ph.D. in clinical psychology from the University of Michigan, and completed a postdoctoral fellowship in cardiovascular epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health. His lab focuses on older adults, and the overarching goal of his lab is 1) identify, 2) understand, and 3) intervene upon the individual and environmental determinants of psychological wellbeing that enhance healthy behaviors and reduce risk of chronic conditions. For this work he has been recognized as one of Forbes 30 Under 30, an Association for Psychological Science Rising Star, and American Psychological Association Division 20’s Early Career Achievement Award. He enjoys spending time at the intersection of several disciplines and has published in a range of journals including: PNAS, JAMA Psychiatry, Circulation, Stroke, the American Journal of Epidemiology, and Milbank Quarterly. He notes that none of this would have been possible without the incredible mentorship that he received from people like: Drs Christopher Peterson, Laura Kubzansky, Tyler VanderWeele, Jacqui Smith, Carol Ryff, and Vic Strecher. He is also deeply grateful for his tremendous collaborators and trainees.

Image of David Newman

Dissertation Award

This award is conferred on the author of a Ph.D. dissertation on a topic in the domain of positive psychology.  Many of the applications received this year were characterized by impressively high levels of originality and methodological complexity: a very promising perspective for the future of positive psychology.


David Newman
University of California

David B. Newman is currently a Post-Doctoral Scholar in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of California, San Francisco.
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He completed a Ph.D. in Social Psychology at the University of Southern California and an MA in Experimental Psychology at the College of William and Mary. Broadly speaking, Dr. Newman is interested in understanding well-being in daily life and relies heavily on daily diary and Ecological Momentary Assessment methods. He has published 16 journal articles and book chapters, including two first authored papers at the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology as well as first authored papers at Social Psychological and Personality Science, Journal of Personality, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Emotion, Journal of Positive Psychology, and Journal of Happiness Studies. His research has been covered by various media outlets, including the Atlantic and Psychology Today. He has received two grants (one as PI and one as Co-I) from the John Templeton Foundation to study the nature of gratitude to God in daily life. He has also received two grants from the National Science Foundation to conduct cross-cultural research on well-being in Japan and South Korea.

Image of Kelly Allen

Dissertation Award Honorable Mention

This award is conferred on the author of a Ph.D. dissertation on a topic in the domain of positive psychology.  Many of the applications received this year were characterized by impressively high levels of originality and methodological complexity: a very promising perspective for the future of positive psychology.


Kelly Allen
Monash University

Dr. Allen is an outstanding early career researcher at Monash University’s Faculty of Education where her work has been recognised by numerous esteemed awards, exemplifying her profound impact within her field.
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Dr. Allen’s research is motivated by the global concern that one in three young people do not feel like they belong to school, despite a student’s sense of school belonging (i.e., feeling respected, accepted, and valued at school) associated strongly with long-term implications for health and wellbeing. Her Ph.D., “In Pursuit of Belonging: A socio-ecological perspective of school belonging in secondary school”  received outstanding reviews from my two International thesis examiners from New Zealand and the United Kingdom. In Australia, her thesis was awarded the prestigious ‘Award for Excellent PhD Thesis in Psychology’ by the Australian Psychological Society. The thesis was also awarded the ‘Psychology of Relationships Thesis Award’ by the Psychology of Relationships Interest Group, a division within the Australian Psychological Society. A major publication to emerge from her Ph.D. has become the most cited paper on school belonging published in the last five years pointing to the rigour of her research. Publications that emerged from her Ph.D research have been used in important international publications, cited in government-level policy for student wellbeing and adopted by several international Graduate courses.

 

Image of Scott Donaldson

Dissertation Award Honorable Mention

This award is conferred on the author of a Ph.D. dissertation on a topic in the domain of positive psychology.  Many of the applications received this year were characterized by impressively high levels of originality and methodological complexity: a very promising perspective for the future of positive psychology.


Scott Donaldson
University of Southern California

Scott is a Senior Research Scientist in the Department of Preventive Medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC.
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Scott completed his Postdoctoral Scholarship in Evaluation, Statistics, and Measurement at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, and his PhD in
Evaluation and Applied Research Methods and a co-concentration in Positive Organizational Psychology from Claremont Graduate University.

Scott is currently the President-Elect of the Positive Work and Organizations Division and will assume the presidency after the 2021 World Congress. Dr. Kim Cameron sat on his dissertation titled “Evaluating Employee Positive Functioning and Performance: A Positive Work and Organizations Approach,” which contributed four studies on the evaluation of positive psychology interventions and validated four new theory-driven building blocks in addition to Seligman’s PERMA model. To date, Scott has over 20 publications and numerous manuscripts under review and in preparation in top tier positive psychology and management journals, such as the Journal of Positive Psychology and the International Journal of Management Reviews (Impact Factor = 8.6). Most of his published research uses advanced quantitative analytic methods, such as meta-analysis, item response theory, factor analytic methods, and multitrait-multimethod analyses to measure aspects of employee flourishing.

Image of Dwight Tse

Dissertation Award Honorable Mention

This award is conferred on the author of a Ph.D. dissertation on a topic in the domain of positive psychology.  Many of the applications received this year were characterized by impressively high levels of originality and methodological complexity: a very promising perspective for the future of positive psychology.


Dwight Tse
University of Strathclyde

Dwight C. K. Tse is a Lecturer (Assistant Professor equivalent) in the School of Psychological Sciences and Health, University of Strathclyde, Scotland.
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Holding a PhD in Positive Developmental Psychology at Claremont Graduate University, he was previously a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and Lecturer at the California State University, Los Angeles. Broadly defined, his research interests include positive lifespan developmental psychology, with specific focuses on flow, autotelic personality, vital/meaningful engagement, and positive aging. His dissertation examined the age-related differences and long-term changes in flow experiences across adulthood in various domains using various operationalizations. His research can be found in various peer-reviewed, academic journals, such as The Journal of Positive Psychology and The Journal of Gerontology, Series B: Psychological Sciences.

Image of Pninit Russo-Netzer

Spirituality and Meaning Researcher Award

This award recognizes exemplary professionals that have had and are continuing to have a substantially positive impact in research in spirituality/meaning. The quality of their work serves as an important example for the field of spirituality/meaning and the larger field of positive psychology, as it demonstrates strong theory, research, and/or practice.


Pninit Russo-Netzer
University of Haifa; Achva Academic College, ISRAEL

Dr. Pninit Russo-Netzer is a senior lecturer and the head of the Education Department at Achva Academic College, and a researcher at the University of Haifa.
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Her main research and practice interests focus on meaning in life, positive psychology, existential psychology, spirituality, positive change and growth. She is the founder and head of the ‘Compass’ Institute for the Study and Application of Meaning in life, and the head of the Academic Training Program for Logotherapy (meaning-oriented psychotherapy) at Tel-Aviv University. She displayed many years of enormous innovation and scholarship in the science of spirituality and meaning in life, and her multiple current and future projects in this space, further validates that importance for the field. Her empirical work adopts a broad perspective, using various methodologies, to explore these topics across populations and diverse cultural subgroups and professionals, following adversity and transformative life experiences, as well as developmentally throughout the lifespan from childhood and adolescence to late adulthood. Her attempts to create an integrative framework involves the development of evidence-based models, and the creation and validation of several new measurement scales, that have been translated to several languages. She published scholarly journal articles and several books on these topics, and is currently working on an in-depth exploration of the interplay between character strengths, synchronicity, growth processes, and wholeness with spirituality, meaning and well-being.

Image of Denise Quinlan

Positive Educator Impact Award – IPPAEd Division

This award recognizes individuals (educators, students, coaches, consultants, administrators, parents, academics) that are having a positive impact in an educational and academic setting by implanting the principles, practices, and applications of Positive Education. As such this award is open to individuals or teams who work in educational settings, and academics focused on positive education research.


Denise Quinlan
New Zealand Institute of Wellbeing & Resilience, NZ

This award reflects the combined efforts of Dr Denise Quinlan and Dr Lucy Hone to expand the reach of robust theory, empirical evidence and best-practice pedagogy across diverse education settings.
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Translating research to practice using diverse formats (books, conferences, licensed training packages, online courses, class and staff room resources, podcasts, publications and webinars), they are passionate about delivering multiple opportunities to build capability and capacity for wellbeing across the education sector – both nationally and internationally. Together they wrote, The Educators’ Guide to Whole-school Wellbeing: A Practical Guide to Getting Started, Best-practice Process and Effective Implementation (Routledge, 2020), described by Aaron Jarden, University of Melbourne, as “one of the best books I’ve read in the field of positive psychology – in my top 5 (out of hundreds)…Nothing less than a masterclass on application and implementation science of wellbeing in education…” and have run the Wellbeing in Education NZ (WENZ) Conferences since 2017. Other highlights include regional Wellbeing Communities of Practice involving hundreds of schools, enabling all NZ schools to access their wellbeing programmes via government funding, and three seasons of the Bringing Wellbeing to Life Podcast.

Image of Lucy Hone

Positive Educator Impact Award – IPPAEd Division

This award recognizes individuals (educators, students, coaches, consultants, administrators, parents, academics) that are having a positive impact in an educational and academic setting by implanting the principles, practices, and applications of Positive Education. As such this award is open to individuals or teams who work in educational settings, and academics focused on positive education research.


Lucy Hone
New Zealand Institute of Wellbeing & Resilience, NZ

This award reflects the combined efforts of Dr Denise Quinlan and Dr Lucy Hone to expand the reach of robust theory, empirical evidence and best-practice pedagogy across diverse education settings.
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Translating research to practice using diverse formats (books, conferences, licensed training packages, online courses, class and staff room resources, podcasts, publications and webinars), they are passionate about delivering multiple opportunities to build capability and capacity for wellbeing across the education sector – both nationally and internationally. Together they wrote, The Educators’ Guide to Whole-school Wellbeing: A Practical Guide to Getting Started, Best-practice Process and Effective Implementation (Routledge, 2020), described by Aaron Jarden, University of Melbourne, as “one of the best books I’ve read in the field of positive psychology – in my top 5 (out of hundreds)…Nothing less than a masterclass on application and implementation science of wellbeing in education…” and have run the Wellbeing in Education NZ (WENZ) Conferences since 2017. Other highlights include regional Wellbeing Communities of Practice involving hundreds of schools, enabling all NZ schools to access their wellbeing programmes via government funding, and three seasons of the Bringing Wellbeing to Life Podcast.

Image of Kristján Kristjánsson

Positive Educator Impact Award – IPPAEd Division

This award recognizes individuals (educators, students, coaches, consultants, administrators, parents, academics) that are having a positive impact in an educational and academic setting by implanting the principles, practices, and applications of Positive Education. As such this award is open to individuals or teams who work in educational settings, and academics focused on positive education research.


Kristján Kristjánsson
University of Birmingham, UK

Kristján Kristjánsson is Professor of Character Education and Virtue Ethics, and Deputy Director of the Jubilee Centre for Character and Virtues, University of Birmingham, U.K.
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His research spans theories in values education, with special emphasis on the notions of character strengths and virtues. He has written extensively on themes in general education, moral education, educational psychology, and moral philosophy, and sees himself essentially as a bridge-builder between philosophy and social science. Kristjánsson is the author of 8 books, including Virtues and Vices in Positive Psychology (C.U.P., 2013). He has published over 150 articles in international journals and is the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Moral Education. In 2011 he was presented with the Ása Guðmundsdóttir Wright Award, the most prestigious scholarly award given to an Icelandic academic across the Sciences and Humanities. In 2016 he won the Society for Educational Studies Prize for the best U.K. Education book of 2015. Kristjánsson was a founding member of the Steering Group of the International Positive Education Network, and Chair of the Paper Selection Committee for its first festival in Dallas, Texas, 2016. He is an invited Keynote Speaker for the European Conference of Positive Psychology, Iceland, 2022.

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Contributions in Positive Health Award – Positive Health and Wellness Division

This award recognizes individuals with long and distinguished careers who have made a notable impact on the field of positive health. Nominees can be any professional involved in positive health (academics, researchers, clinicians, organizations, practitioners, consultants, coaches), who uses positive psychology to advance human longevity, quality of life, and physiological and psychological wellbeing (including decreased morbidity).


Gail Ironson
University of Miami, USA

Gail Ironson, M.D., Ph.D. is a Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry at the University of Miami.
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She has more than 250 publications in the field of behavioral medicine and positive psychology.  She and her team have examined positive psychological factors that predict better health/survival over 17 years in HIV, and/or protect health in a nationwide sample. These include positive affect/positive emotional expression, meaning, compassion, optimism, self-efficacy, active patient involvement, positive states of mind, personality (creative interactors), distress tolerance, conscientiousness, relaxation practice, coping, and recovery from trauma. Aspects of spirituality that predict survival or slower disease progression in HIV include having a positive view of God and believing that God will forgive you, being able to increase in spirituality after the HIV diagnosis, having a spiritual practice, spiritual reframing, and overcoming spiritual guilt. She and her team have also identified relationships of positive psychological factors with biological markers such as inflammation (CRP), oxytocin, cortisol, and immune measures. She is currently the PI on a Templeton funded grant which is the 6 year follow-up of a nationwide study examining the predictive power of positive psychological factors and spirituality for health, and is the current President of the American Psychosomatic Society.

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Exemplary Research to Practice Award– Work and Organizations Division

This award is presented to a member of the Work and Organizations Division who has advanced the application of evidence-based science in the field of positive work and organizations (PWO). Their work serves as a stand-alone exemplar of a cumulative contribution to PWO through applying theory and research in practical applications and/or field application of scientific findings. The quality of their work demonstrates the potential of our members to contribute to PWO theory, research, and/or practice, and should be considered a standard for us all, researchers and practitioners alike, to aspire to as we work to positively transform the way the world works.


Vicki Cabrera
Claremont Graduate University, USA

Vicki Cabrera is an organizational and positive psychology consultant, researcher, and evaluator who is passionate about bringing out the best in people and organizations.
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Her work focuses on improving well-being, optimizing performance and development, and achieving and measuring positive outcomes and social impact for organizations in the U.S., the Philippines, and internationally.

She has 19 years of diverse professional experience across the business, nonprofit, education, social enterprise, and public sectors, including co-founding a school for social entrepreneurship in the Philippines where she taught a class on character development based on positive psychology.

Vicki is pursuing a PhD in Positive Organizational Psychology with a co-concentration in Evaluation at Claremont Graduate University and received a Stuart Oskamp Fellowship. Her current research focuses on understanding the well-being of social entrepreneurs and how to design positive organizational psychology interventions to improve well-being. She is a principal consultant for the CGU-Accenture Talent Innovation Lab and an evaluation consultant for the Claremont Evaluation Center. Her team from CGU was a finalist at IPPA’s 4th Positive Organizational Intervention Challenge.

Vicki holds an MPA in Public & Nonprofit Management & Policy from New York University and serves on the Executive Committee of the IPPA Work & Organizations Division.

 

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Exemplary Research to Practice Award– Work and Organizations Division

This award is presented to a member of the Work and Organizations Division who has advanced the application of evidence-based science in the field of positive work and organizations (PWO). Their work serves as a stand-alone exemplar of a cumulative contribution to PWO through applying theory and research in practical applications and/or field application of scientific findings. The quality of their work demonstrates the potential of our members to contribute to PWO theory, research, and/or practice, and should be considered a standard for us all, researchers and practitioners alike, to aspire to as we work to positively transform the way the world works.


Markus Ebner
University Vienna, Austria

Dr. Markus Ebner has a PhD in economic and organizational psychology with years of experience as a coach and trainer to high level organizations and companies.
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He teaches organizational psychology at the University of Vienna and the University of Klagenfurt and has been researching and publishing on the topic of leadership for more than 15 years As one of Europe’s leading scholars on Positive Leadership he developed the PERMA-Lead model and connects scientific research to practical management issues. His books about Positive Leadership introduces the wide-ranging research that shapes this revolutionary leadership-style and, most important, it describes many field-tested tools to implement this approach. PERMA-Lead presents a new, evidence-based, and practical Positive Leadership concept supported by many studies. The books also offers a comprehensive “toolbox” for implementing Positive Leadership. They are therefore a real treasure chest for managers, trainers, personnel developers, coaches, and everyone who professionally works with executives. In addition, guest authors from various companies and organizations such as Lidl, dm, IKEA, SOS Kinderdorf and T-Systems provide practical insights into how they successfully implement this leadership approach. Markus Ebner is member of the “Board of Directors” of the Austrian Positive Psychology Association (APPA).

 

 

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The Vaillant Award for Contributions to Positive Clinical Psychology– Positive Clinical Psychology Division

Named in recognition of Dr. George Vaillant’s seminal contributions to the field of Positive Clinical Psychology, this award recognizes distinguished contributions of the application of positive psychology in the clinical realm, including but not limited to endeavors such as designing, delivery, training and evaluation of positive assessment and interventions.


Chiara Ruini
University of Bologna, Italy

Chiara Ruini, PhD. is currently Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology at the University of Bologna, Department of Psychology.
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After receiving her Ph.D. in General and Clinical Psychology in 2003, she developed her research and teaching activities focusing on the integration between positive and clinical psychology. Since 2006 she has been teaching the first academic course on Positive Psychology available in Italy entitled “Clinical Applications of Positive Psychology” and since 2016 Dr Ruini also teaches the course “Clinical Psychology”. In 2017 Chiara Ruini has authored the book entitled “Positive Psychology in the Clinical Domains” published by Springer . She has  authored more than 80 articles published in peer-reviewed international journals. She is actually Past President for the Italian Society of Positive Psychology and  serves the Editorial Boards for international Journals such as the International Journal of Applied Positive Psychology, the Journal of Happiness Studies; Applied Psychology Health and Well-being.  Her research interests are concerned with Positive Psychology, Clinical Psychology,  and positive interventions. She developed innovative interventions for the promotion of well-being in special populations (children,  adolescents, older adults and populations with physical and mental disorders), with a particular emphasis on the treatment of depression by enhancing dimensions of eudaimonia.

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Inspiring Mentor Award – SIPPA (Student Division)

The SIPPA Inspiring Mentor Award recognizes one outstanding mentor in the field of positive psychology who provides continued commitment and support to students that foster professional and academic development.


Sarah Scnitker
Baylor University, USA

Dr. Sarah Schnitker is an Associate Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at Baylor University.
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She holds a PhD and an MA in Personality and Social Psychology from the University of California, Davis, and a BA in Psychology from Grove City College.  Schnitker studies virtue and character development in adolescents and emerging adults, with a focus on the role of spirituality and religion in virtue formation. She specializes in the study of patience, self-control, gratitude, generosity, and thrift.  Schnitker has procured more than $7 million in funding as a principal investigator on multiple research grants, and she has published in a variety of scientific journals and edited volumes.  Schnitker is an Associate Editor for Psychology of Religion and Spirituality and an Editorial Board member for Journal of Research in Personality. She is a dedicated mentor, having served as dissertation advisor for more than 20 doctoral students, whom she helps to cultivate intellectual virtues alongside scientific competencies. She is the recipient of the Virginia Sexton American Psychological Association’s Division 36 Mentoring Award and Student International Positive Psychology Association Mentor Award.

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Inspiring Mentor Award Honorable Mention– SIPPA (Student Division)

The SIPPA Inspiring Mentor Award recognizes one outstanding mentor in the field of positive psychology who provides continued commitment and support to students that foster professional and academic development.


Meg Warren
Western Washington University, USA

Meg A. Warren, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of Management at Western Washington University.
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Her research on positive psychological approaches to equity, diversity and inclusion in organizations, and cultural factors affecting well-being have received several awards and honors. She was the Founding President of the Work & Organizations Division of IPPA, Co-Founder of the Western Positive Psychology Association, Co-Founder of the Positive Organizational Inclusion Scholarship on Equity and Diversity (POISED) micro-community, and Co-Editor of the International Journal of Wellbeing. Across these roles, Meg has implemented various initiatives such as launching a positive work and organizations newsletter, editing special issues, and organizing workshops to deepen conversations on positive psychology in other disciplines. Via these programs, Meg has mentored students and colleagues new to the field and built these groups from the ground up to move forward positive psychology research, scholarship, dissemination, and practice. Her goal is to equip those new to positive psychology to develop into strong contributors who build and expand the field. As such, her mentees have held key leadership positions within and beyond IPPA, have published impactful positive psychology research, and made critical contributions to positive psychology practice.

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Inspiring Mentor Award Honorable Mention– SIPPA (Student Division)

The SIPPA Inspiring Mentor Award recognizes one outstanding mentor in the field of positive psychology who provides continued commitment and support to students that foster professional and academic development.


Andrew Howell
MacEwan University, Canada

I am a Professor in the Department of Psychology at MacEwan University in Alberta, Canada, where I am a past recipient of a Distinguished Instructor Award and an Outstanding Faculty Mentor Award.
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I am honoured to be recognized in this manner by IPPA and its student members.

I am privileged to be surrounded by curious, bright, and motivated undergraduate students, both in the classroom (including a Psychology of Well-Being seminar) and in my lab. I strive to mentor students through the lens of self-determination theory, supporting their needs for autonomy, competence, and relatedness and modelling an ethic of integrity and reflectiveness. My students have contributed meaningfully to research on such topics as apology willingness; mindfulness and self-regulation; language, stigma, and mental health; other-oriented hope; nature involvement and well-being; and implicit theories of well-being. They have been co-authors on publications on these topics; on several occasions, they have been first authors.

My university identifies ‘students-first’ and ‘student-engaged research’ as two key pillars within its mission. Within that context, I strive to embody student-centered teaching and research as applied especially to well-being studies. I am grateful for this recognition by an organization whose members have contributed so significantly to this field.