Congratulations, Fall 2025 graduates!
12/05/25 — We are proud to recognize a few outstanding students from the College of Behavioral and Community Sciences.
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The Serovich Scholars Program, established with a gift from Bob Clark, provides scholarships to students in CBCS who demonstrate leadership and community involvement.

The Florida Center for Behavioral Health Workforce in launched the state's first-of-its-kind interactive dashboard that projects behavioral health workforce supply and demand through 2035.

Patients with mild hearing loss who received hearing aids and other support experienced an increased desire to engage in the world around them, according to a study by the Auditory Rehabilitation and Clinical Trials Laboratory.

A workforce training initiative aimed at individuals with disabilities began its first cohort this August, combining cutting-edge virtual reality and artificial intelligence technologies to prepare participants for careers in skilled trades.

Four CBCS graduate programs are among the nation's top 50 and another is in the top 100, according to recent rankings released by U.S. News & World Report.
An introductory mental health and addiction course offered through the Department of Behavioral Health Science and Practice led Jayden Haggler to publish a book aimed at introducing mental health concepts to children.
12/05/25 — We are proud to recognize a few outstanding students from the College of Behavioral and Community Sciences.
12/04/25 — Sandra Ilona Napolitano, an Honors College grad earning a bachelor's in criminology, will address her graduating class as the ceremony’s student speaker.
12/03/25 — Master of Social Work student Sandra “Ace” Accilien partnered with CALM to launch Buckets of Care.