Nathan Lorenzo Smith, MA, MSW, LCSW, LADC
About
Titles
Postgraduate Associate (Psychology Section)
Biography
Nathan L. Smith (he/him/his) is a doctoral candidate in the Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology program, social justice, and diversity specialization at Fielding Graduate University. He is a Clinical and Community Psychology Fellow through the Connecticut Mental Health Center (CMHC) at the Substance Use and Addiction Treatment Unit (SATU) and The Consultation Center (TCC). Nathan received Fielding’s 2024 Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) student award for his excellent contributions to promoting DEI in Fielding’s Clinical Psychology doctoral program. He is also the interim president of Fielding’s Black Students Association and a Marie Fielder Center for Democracy, Leadership, and Education Research Fellow.
Nathan earned his M.A. in Clinical Psychology from Fielding Graduate University. He also obtained an MSW from Fordham University and a post-graduate Addiction Counseling certificate from Albertus Magnus College. Before his graduate studies, Nathan received a B.A. in Social Science from Albertus Magnus College and his A.S. in General Studies from Gateway Community College. He also received his Seminar in Field Instruction (SIFI) certification from Southern Connecticut State University. Nathan is a licensed clinical social worker and alcohol and drug counselor in Connecticut. Before his doctoral studies, he was a senior clinical director for Connecticut’s Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services (DMHAS) funded Young Adult Services (YAS) transitional programs in New Haven, CT. As a seasoned clinician, Nathan has worked across psychiatric emergency and inpatient settings with adolescents, young adults, and adults diagnosed with various psychiatric conditions at Yale New Haven Psychiatric Hospital. He has also worked as a Psychology and Human Services undergraduate associate faculty member at Post University.
Clinically, Nathan utilizes a multiculturally informed psychodynamic therapeutic approach to support individuals’ reparative work from various psychosocial stressors and psychological traumas. He has a particular interest in attachment-based approaches and working with racial and ethnic minority populations, specifically Black boys and men exposed to community and sexual violence and racial trauma. Nathan also utilizes existential approaches (e.g., relational cultural theory and therapy) to explore individuals’ relational patterns and promote the importance of growth-fostering relationships to transform chronic disconnection into connection and increase relational resiliency capacity. Nathan has trained in utilizing Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT), Attachment Regulation and Competency (ARC) Framework, and psychodynamic therapy with children and adolescents at CMHC’s West Haven Child and Adolescent Services (WHCAS) Program. At CMHC’s Substance Use and Addiction Treatment Unit, he used evidence-based psychodynamic treatments to treat adults with primary substance use and addiction disorders.
Through qualitative inquiry, Nathan’s research explores various social justice and diversity issues affecting racially and ethnically diverse populations. Specifically, Nathan is interested in understanding the experiences of Black boys and men exposed to violence (e.g., community and sexual), racial trauma, and substance use disorders in the Black community. During his doctoral studies, Nathan has led research on graduate students’ and faculty’s experiences living during the pandemic and Black clinical psychology graduates’ experiences with racial battle fatigue in academia. His dissertation explores the experiences of Black men aged 18-34 who have been exposed to direct and indirect community violence. Nathan’s dissertation seeks an understanding of the psychosocial and mental health effects of community violence exposure and how expressions of masculinity can either complicate or create resiliency with these experiences.
Appointments
Psychiatry
Postgraduate AssociatePrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
- Psychiatry
Education & Training
- MA
- Fielding Graduate University, Clinical Psychology (2022)
- MSW
- Fordham University, Social Work (2018)
- BA
- Albertus Magnus College, Sociology/Psychology (2014)
- AS
- Gateway Community College, General Studies (2012)
Research
Overview
Medical Research Interests
Public Health Interests
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
activity They Don't Hear Us: Exploring the Experiences of Black Students and Racial Battle Fatigue in Academia
Poster PresentationUniversity of Connecticut's Social Equity Leadership ConferenceDetails06/21/2024 - PresentStamford, CT, United StatesSponsored by University of Connecticutactivity They Don't Hear Us: Exploring the Experiences of Black Students and Racial Battle Fatigue in Academia
Oral PresentationQualitative Inquiry at Fielding: Past, Present and Future ConferenceDetails06/01/2024 - PresentZoomactivity They Don't Hear Us: Exploring the Experiences of Black Students and Racial Battle Fatigue in Academia
Oral PresentationInternational Congress of Quality Inquiry ConferenceDetails05/29/2024 - PresentZoomhonor 2024 Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Student Award
Other AwardFielding Graduate UniversityDetails05/02/2024activity They Don't Hear Us: Exploring the Experiences of Black Students and Racial Battle Fatigue in Academia
Oral PresentationVirginia State University's 8th Annual Social Justice ConferenceDetails04/12/2024 - PresentPetersburg, VA, United States