MEET OUR GRADUATES: An Advocate for Members of the LGBTQ Community with Substance Use Disorders

布琳对着镜头摆姿势

“RIC taught me how to 工作 and collaborate with people from different backgrounds while embracing my own,布琳·特里说.

Graduating from Rhode Island College has become an enduring tradition for alumna Brynn Terry and her mother, 父亲和两个兄弟.

Her father Brian Terry earned his M.A. in counseling from RIC in 1990, her mother Stephanie Terry earned an M.S.W. in 1999, her middle brother Jarrod Terry earned a B.S. in special education in 2019 and her older brother Alex Terry earned a B.A. in political science and public administration in 2013. 

Terry herself is a two-time RIC alumna, with a B.A. 获得心理学学士学位(2022)和B.S.W. (2023). She is a dynamic individual with a burning passion for helping others. She says her inspiration comes from her parents’ commitment to serving others. 

“我妈妈是不可思议的. Before she retired, her job involved reunifying families. These are families in which the parents struggled with substance use disorders that affected the children,特里说。.

“But it was my dad who inspired me to want to 工作 with adults with substance use disorders. Both my parents believe that everybody deserves an extra chance,她说。. 

Her parents’ influence showed itself throughout her tenure at RIC. 在她的第一学期, Terry joined the RICovery club, a student support group that meets around issues of substance abuse.

“Being a part of this club helped me understand my future path,她说。. Terry has been president of the club for the last three years.

After earning her undergraduate degrees at RIC, Terry was hired as a behavioral technician, 工作ing with children on the autism spectrum at Meaningful Outcomes. 目前, she is a clinical case manager at Emory Recovery Center in Attleboro, where she is engaged in both counseling and case management. 

Last summer she 工作ed with the Tri-County Community Action Agency on a 2023 State Opioid Response grant, providing opioid and stimulant use prevention training for RIC and Bryant University students and student-athletes. 

Terry praises and appreciates not only the opportunities she found at RIC but all the different professors, peers and advisors who challenged her in unique ways.

“RIC taught me how to 工作 and collaborate with people from different backgrounds while embracing my own.她说,“博士。. 马克特博士,. 战斗和博士. Lewis were incredibly inspiring advocates who pushed me throughout my experience at RIC, challenging me to develop and to keep asking questions. From Professor Battle, I especially learned a lot about my own identity as a queer person.”

Terry would love to earn her Ph.D. 总有一天, 但是现在, she hopes to continue her research focused on the lack of support for queer individuals in sober living environments, 她在M ?.S.W. 工作. Now that she has finalized the pilot study, Terry hopes to find a research team and to develop a proposal to seek funding to roll out the study.

“I want to advocate for queer individuals. Particularly those who are gender non-binary and who struggle to find appropriate sober living facilities that align with their gender identity,她说。. “My research shows that there’s a need to ensure that house managers, employees and residents are equipped to provide the necessary support in a compassionate and understanding manner.”