T.M. Mosley - Agnes Scott College

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Mosley’s Bio
T.M. Mosley, Ph.D., NCC currently serves as the Associate Dean of Students for Living and Learning at
Agnes Scott College. Additionally, she serves as a professor for the Sophomore Seminar focusing on
writing and rhetoric at Spelman College and as a graduate faculty member in the Mental Health
Counseling Program at Georgia State University. Before joining Agnes Scott College, she served as the
Interim Assistant Dean for the Office of Black Student Affairs for the seven Claremont Colleges:
Pomona College, Scripps College, Claremont Graduate University, Pitzer College, Claremont McKenna
College, Harvey Mudd College, and the Keck Graduate Institute. Prior to her Spring 2015 interim
appointment at the Claremont University Consortium, she served as an academic Assistant Dean in the
Office of Pluralism and Leadership and directed the Office of Black Student Advising at Dartmouth
College. She has experience working in a variety of college/university functional areas including
academic affairs, student affairs, undergraduate and graduate school instruction, college mental health
counseling, collegiate athletics, career development, and research. Her research and teaching interests
include intersections of identity development (e.g. race, gender, sexual orientation, class, and gender
expression) in emerging adults (i.e. individuals between the ages of 18 and 25), help-seeking attitudes,
intentions to seek counseling, and multicultural counseling interventions. As a small business owner of
a consulting firm, she also recognizes the importance of providing women with the opportunities,
resources, and skills to pursue entrepreneurial endeavors. Her passion for providing team-building and
purposeful leadership development is the fuel that drives her dynamic enterprise. Mosley has a B.A. in
Interdisciplinary Psychology from the University of Alabama, and a M.A. in Mental Health Counseling
from Louisiana State University. She holds a Ph.D. in Counseling and Psychological Services from
Georgia State University and was awarded the Emerging Leader Fellowship by a division of the American
Counseling Association.
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