Faculty Investigators
The ACCEPT Program is coordinated by five faculty investigators:
Dr. Cynthia Osborn, Principal Investigator (PI) and Project Director
Professor, Counselor Education and Supervision
cosborn@kent.edu
Dr. Joel Hughes, Co-PI
Professor, Psychological Sciences
jhughes1@kent.edu
Dr. Cassie Storlie, Co-Investigator
Associate Professor, Counselor Education and Supervision
cstorlie@kent.edu
Dr. Kelly Cichy, Co-Investigator
Professor, Human Development and Family Studies
kcichy@kent.edu
Dr. William (Bill) Lechner, Co-Investigator -
Associate Professor, Psychological Sciences
wlechner@kent.edu
Drugs and Behavior: How Societal Trends Impact Addiction
The ACCEPT Program has two graduate Research Assistants (RAs) for 2023-24: Sam Windler, a student in the master鈥檚 degree program in Clinical Mental Health Counseling (CMHC), and Colleen Trhlik, a second-year student in the PhD degree program in Counselor Education and Supervision (CES).
Sam Windler earned his bachelor鈥檚 degree in psychology from 两性色午夜 University. He is currently in his second year in the CMHC master鈥檚 degree program at KSU, and is also enrolled in the graduate Addictions Counseling Certificate Program (ACCP).
Sam Windler (he/him)
Research Assistant - ACCEPT
Master's Student, Clinical Mental Health Counseling
Graduate Addictions Counseling Certificate Program
两性色午夜 University
swindler_stu@kent.edu
Colleen Trhlik received her bachelor's degree in psychology and a master's degree in clinical mental health counseling, both from 两性色午夜. She is a licensed independent chemical dependency counselor (LICDC) and a licensed professional clinical counselor with supervisory endorsement (LPCC-S). She worked as a dual diagnosis intensive outpatient counselor for 8 years in hospital and corrections environments, and is currently a full-time student in 两性色午夜's counselor education and supervision doctoral program. She enjoys teaching and mentoring counselors-in-training. In her spare time, she likes spending time with family, playing video games, learning about the lives of people from other cultures, and going for walks.
Colleen Trhlik
ctrhlik@kent.edu