Christina Ramirez Smith

Christina Ramirez Smith is an Educational Administrator and Professor of Educational and Higher Education Administration, Leadership and Planning. Dr. Ramirez Smith studies higher education with an emphasis upon the preparation of leaders for the global workforce. Her other research interests include the impact of debt on graduate students, organizational development and change, higher education finance and policy, as well as the unique mental health issues experienced by graduate students in addition to medical students. Currently, she is affiliated with The College of The Bahamas where she serves as Special Assistant to the President.

Publications

Medical Students' Quest Towards the Long White Coat: Impact on Mental Health and Well-Being
Christina Ramirez Smith. © 2021. 32 pages.
Every year across the globe, thousands of students begin the quest towards becoming a medical doctor and donning a long white coat. Global research indicates that after beginning...
Open Educational Resources Potential at The University of the Bahamas
Christina Ramirez Smith. © 2020. 19 pages.
This chapter explores the potential for implementation of OER at the University of The Bahamas (UB). Several questions guide the chapter's review: (1) How are OERs currently...
International Journal of Teacher Education and Professional Development (IJTEPD)
Molly Y Zhou. Est. 2018.
The International Journal of Teacher Education and Professional Development (IJTEPD) invites quantitative and qualitative research and interdisciplinary studies in education...
Exploring the Pressures of Medical Education From a Mental Health and Wellness Perspective
Christina Ramirez Smith. © 2018. 349 pages.
Discussions surrounding mental health are becoming more prominent and these conditions are becoming less stigmatized. Studying the effects that mental wellness has on students...
Medical Students' Quest Towards the Long White Coat: Impact on Mental Health and Well-Being
Christina Ramirez Smith. © 2018. 42 pages.
Every year across the globe, thousands of students begin the quest towards becoming a medical doctor and donning a long white coat. Global research indicates that after beginning...
Black, Female, and Foreign: The Triple-Invisibility of Afro-Caribbean Women in the Academy
Christina Ramirez Smith. © 2015. 27 pages.
Society has failed to acknowledge intra-group differences, and as a result, disregarded the ethnic distinctiveness, cultural practices, and norms of Afro-Caribbean emigrant...