Skip to main content
Headshot of Katrina Debnam

Katrina Debnam

Associate Professor of Education, University of Virginia School of Education and Human Development

Katrina J. Debnam is an associate professor of education in the research, statistics, and evaluation and educational psychology - applied developmental science programs in the School of Education and Human Development. She also holds a joint appointment in the School of Nursing at UVA and an adjunct appointment in the Department of Mental Health at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. In addition, Debnam serves as associate director for research equity in Youth-Nex: The UVA Center to Promote Effective Youth Development.  

Debnam's scholarship stems from her interest in health outcomes for marginalized adolescents through community-based violence prevention strategies. Debnam serves as a research expert in three interrelated strands of adolescent health: teen dating violence prevention, creating equitable school environments for Black youth, and the protective role of religion and spirituality in youth development. 

Debnam was a recipient of the UVA Research Achievement Award for Research Excellence in 2022, given to faculty members who have generated a sufficient volume of high-quality scholarship and are emerging leaders in their field. In 2018 she received the UVA School of Nursing Office of Nursing Research Outstanding Faculty Publication Award.  

Debnam’s work has been funded by the National Institute of Health, the Institute of Education Sciences, and the William T. Grant Foundation. Her research has been featured in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence, Prevention Science, Remedial and Special Education, Trauma, Violence & Abuse, Journal of Educational Psychology, and the Journal of Teacher Education. She currently serves on the editorial board of Prevention Science and the Journal of Youth and Adolescence. 

 

Education

Ph.D., University of Maryland, College Park, 2012
MPH, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2003
B.S., Morgan State University, 2001