Photo of Corinne Anselm

Corinne Anselm, BA, MPS

Research Analyst
Box 354920 / Room 110D
  • Biography
  • Projects
  • Publications

Corinne Anselm has a BA from the University of Missouri-St. Louis and a Master’s in Political Science from the University of Oklahoma. Prior to working at the SMART Center, she worked as a graduate research and teaching assistant for OU and the Suicide Prevention Resource Center. Her research focused on survey methodology, suicide prevention, and group identity dynamics (esp. gender identity and sexuality) within public opinion research. She is especially interested in understanding the role of carceral systems in the context of mental health care and marginalized communities. In her free time, she enjoys hiking, reading, watching Bob’s Burgers, and spending time with her friends and family.

(Training & Technical Assistance) In addition to regular training activities and special areas of focus, the Northwest Mental Health Technology Transfer Center (Northwest) has received funding to support increased training and technical assistance for school mental health in Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington. To operationalize this support Northwest has partnered with the University of Washington School Mental Health Assessment, Research, and Training (SMART) Center, a national leader in developing and supporting implementation of evidence-based practices (EBPs) in schools, including prevention, early intervention, and intensive supports. The Northwest School Mental Health (SMH) and Multi-tiered System of Supports (MTSS) Training and Technical Assistance (TA) Center, within the UW SMART Center, supports school mental health efforts with the goal to support states, districts, schools and community partners to build an equitable single system of delivery in which education and mental health systems are integrated across the tiers.
(Training & Technical Assistance) As a key component of this mission, UW SMART has developed strategies and related infrastructure for providing training and technical assistance to state and local education agencies as well as individual school districts. The SMART Center’s “TACore” provides: 1) Training and consultation/coaching focused on developing workforce capacity (among school staff and community partners) to deliver research-based strategies, policies, and practice models relevant to the education context, 2) Technical assistance focused on building evidence-based, multi-tiered systems of school-based behavioral health, using collaborative decision-making processes guided by local data as well as research evidence, and 3) Program evaluation focused on collecting and analyzing existing (e.g., administrative datasets) and novel (e.g., surveys, focus groups) quantitative and qualitative data to determine the impact of new or existing programs, practices, and policies.