Holly Hatton-Bowers

faculty
Work Carolyn Pope Edwards Hall (CPEH) 397
Lincoln NE 68588-0236
US
Work 402-472-2957 On campus, dial 2-2957
Download vCard for Holly Hatton-Bowers
Holly Hatton-Bowers received her doctorate from the University of California, Davis in human development with a focus on caregiver well-being, early childhood development and early mental health. She completed the University of Massachusetts/Napa Infant-Parent Mental Health Post-Graduate Certificate Program in 2007.<br><br>As an Assistant Professor and Early Childhood Extension Specialist in the Department of Child, Youth, and Family Studies (CYAF) at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL), her scholarship activities focus on identifying and implementing effective ways to promote the well-being of early childhood educators, families and young children. The key areas of her work focus on: (1) developing the reflective capacities of caregivers to increase their potential for learning, (2) identifying effective contemplative strategies to support the well-being of caregivers and children, and (3) enhancing social-emotional learning in early care and education.

icon-academic-capEducation

  • Ph D, University of California Davis, 2012

icon-bookmark-starAwards & Honors

  • Honorable Mention best JSWE Mixed Methods Article, Journal of Social Work Education (JSWE) Editorial Advisory Board, Council on Social Work Education, 2016
  • University of Nebraska Innovative Extension New Employee Award. , Nebraska Cooperative Extension Association., 2017

Faculty Bio

Pesticide Resistance Factors

Biological and Ecological Factors Affecting Development of Pesticide Resistance

Read more

Glyphosate-Resistant Palmer Amaranth Confirmed in Southwest Nebraska

May 1, 2015
palmer amaranthFigure 1. A female Palmer amaranth plant in a corn field in southcentral Nebraska. This plant has capacity to produce more than half a million seeds.

Read more

Depictions of Palmer amaranth in corn
Figure 1. (L) Palmer amaranth in corn and (R) a Palmer amaranth seedling. A member of the pigweed family, Palmer amaranth is a difficult to control broadleaf made even more difficult by its growing resistance to herbicides, including atrazine and HPPD inhibitors.

Managing Herbicide-Resistant Palmer Amaranth Field Day

July 1, 2015
Learn how to get an edge on managing Palmer amaranth resistant to atrazine and HPPD-inhibitor herbicides Tuesday, Aug. 4 at a Nebraska Extension field day near Shickley.

Read more

Emergency Crop Damage Disaster Meetings July 17

Storm-damaged corn field in central Nebraska, July 10, 2014
Storm-damaged corn field in south central Nebraska, July 11. (Photo by Ron Seymour)

 

Read more

Counties Designated as Natural Disaster Areas

Farm Service Agency (FSA) State Executive Director, Dan Steinkruger, announced 29 counties have been designated as primary natural disaster areas due to physical damage and losses caused by excessive rain, high winds, tornadoes, hail, flash flooding, and lightning affecting Nebraska.

Read more

Extension Field Reports

Flooded field & full ditch in Dodge County
As rains abated in some areas this week, low-lying, saturated fields such as this one in Dodge County, drained off.

 

Read more