A wildly successful University of Virginia program, shown to reduce depression among new college students, is spreading in the commonwealth and to Washington, D.C.
Hoos Connected, founded in 2018 by teen psychology expert and the Hugh Kelly Professor of Psychology Joseph Allen, is being piloted at Georgetown University and Virginia Tech this semester.
The program, known outside UVA as The Connection Project, is deceptively simple. Small groups of new college students - first-year, second-year or transfer - meet weekly in a one-credit class to talk though similarities and differences, creating deep connections with others. The groups are facilitated by upperclassmen trained in Allen’s Adolescence Research Lab in UVA’s Department of Psychology.
The program has grown nearly 800% since the first 54 students took part in the first class in spring of 2019. This semester, 475 students are enrolled; to date, more than 2,500 students have benefited from Hoos Connected. It was featured in the New York Times last year.