Previous MBA Recipients
The ACLP Mary Barkey Clinical Excellence Award is presented to an individual child life specialist who has demonstrated exemplary child life care and a high level of clinical skill.
Read more about the previous MBA recipients.
2024 -Julia Mendoza, CCLS
2024 -Julia Mendoza, CCLS
Julia Mendoza began her career as a Certified Child Life Specialist at Children’s Memorial Hermann Hospital in Houston, Texas. She has continued to be an integral part of the team for more than 17 years.
Over the years, she has served as a child life specialist in several units such as the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, the Inpatient Surgical Unit and served for more than 10 years in the Outpatient Pediatric Dialysis Unit. In 2021, Julia advocated to adapt an open float position in efforts to prioritize child life services to Spanish-speaking patients and families. Julia currently serves as the Bilingual Child Life Specialist, and receives consults into all areas of the hospital- PICU, NICU, Heart Center, General Pediatrics, Outpatient Dialysis and Oncology.
Julia values the importance of ongoing communication and collaboration amongst the interdisciplinary teams. She recognizes the value of providing individualized care to all patients and families. DEI is at the forefront of her clinical practice, as she is a member at her hospitals Disparity of Health Workgroup where she works with administration to advocate for the needs of patients and families. She is an active member in her departmental DEI committee, and participated in forming the department’s annual competencies, which focused on DEI specific goals for the past two years. She continues ongoing reflective practice and integrates evidence based practice and research in her clinical work.
Mentoring and helping students into the child life profession has been an ongoing commitment for her. Julia has been a student coordinator for more than 14 years and has played a role in the development of their student program. Throughout her time, she was a member of the ACLP Practicum Task Force; she collaborated with student coordinators in the Houston Texas Medical Center and Southern Association of Child Life Professionals (SACLP). She has co-presented several “Child Life 101” sessions to the community. As an active ACLP member, she continues to stay up to date with current changes with students.
Julia was a Schwartz Round Panelist, co-presented in the Texas Pediatric Care Consortium Pedi Hope Conference, and co-presented in an ACLP webinar session. Julia was nominated for the National Compassionate Caregiver of the Year Award and was mentioned in the ACLP social media page for “Give a Wow”. In the words of one of her colleagues, “Julia is able to build relationships across the generations of child life specialists.” Although she has years of experience, she enjoys learning from her peers. As a co-facilitator for her departmental group supervision, she is able to provide staff with an opportunity for reflection and growth.
From her roots as young child, Julia comes with the skills to be creative and adaptable. She uses these skills in her interventions and integrates them through play. She understands this to be an important role in a patient's overall coping.
2023 -Shaindy Alexander, MS, CCLS
2023 -Shaindy Alexander, MS, CCLS
Most importantly, Shaindy is playful. It is not uncommon to find Shaindy and her googly-eyed handy puppet 'Hermin' engaging in silly moments with patients or helping answer kids' questions on a hospital TV segment called Ask Hermin.
2022 - Lisa A. Ciarrocca, CCLS
2022 - Lisa A. Ciarrocca, CCLS
Lisa A. Ciarrocca has been a certified child life specialist for more than 30 years, starting out in a one-person program and advancing to Child Life Manager at The Goryeb Children’s Hospital (Morristown NJ). Lisa was responsible for the development and leadership of a system-wide child life program. Lisa's experience working with children, adolescents, families, and other professionals in and out of the healthcare setting enabled her to think outside of the box—expanding her child life role into the community and opening her own child life private practice, The Next Step: Partners in Psychosocial Care LLC (Fanwood, NJ), seven years ago.
At her core, Lisa is a true child life clinician. She upholds the value of working and engaging with other professionals on the healthcare team, including parents, to support a holistic approach to helping children and families cope with their medical and life experiences. She shares through storytelling that the value of this collaboration with the medical team, especially in a private-practice setting, is critical to helping children and families cope with all that takes place both inside and out of the hospital.
As a CCLS practicing in the community, Lisa feels it is important to recognize that families have diverse values and cultural beliefs and strives to incorporate this into her practice. In 2020, she completed the Registered Wonders and Worries Provider (RWWP) Training, a research-based curriculum for children and teens impacted by an adult’s illness. She is also a trained grief facilitator, Level 2 Reiki practitioner and, most recently, a children's mindfulness and yoga instructor. Lisa uses the skills she was taught to enhance those patients and families she sees in her practice. This initiative was a direct result of seeing a high level of anxiety of children and adolescents throughout the pandemic.
As a member of ACLP, Lisa has served as a past director and treasurer on the board of directors, in addition to serving on various ACLP committees. She is particularly proud of being an active member and former Chair of the community-based committee and having the opportunity to be part of the community-based think tank and ACLP strategic planning.
Lisa prides herself on being deeply committed to making sure that future child life professionals have the tools needed to continue evolving and practicing at the highest level. Her passion crosses over to her networking—not just with other child life specialists and leaders, but with students, interns, and those interested in the field of child life. She is just as driven and passionate about child life today as the day she started in the field.
2021 - Diane Dingley, MS, CCLS
2021 - Diane Dingley, MS, CCLS
Diane Dingley began her almost 40 year career as a child life specialist at Children’s Minnesota shortly after completing Wheelock College’s first graduate program in Early Childhood Education/Child Life. She has been at the forefront of developing patient and family-centered policies and practices at Children’s. Diane pioneered child life services in hematology/oncology, neonatal care and high-risk pregnancy, cardiology, radiology, and children of adult patients. She embraces a strengths-based approach, and promotes play as fundamental to healing and coping. Working collaboratively with the neonatal developmental care committee, she established Wee Read, an evidence-based reading program designed to promote neonatal infant brain development and infant-parent bonding, and she uses bibliotherapy routinely in her clinical practice. Her partnership with music therapists has expanded music listening and music therapy services in the NICU and throughout the hospital. Diane holds the unique needs of siblings in high regard, providing direct interventions and facilitating SibShops and diagnosis-specific sibling support programs. She has been a champion of bereavement support as a founding and current member of the Bereavement Services Program, developing and facilitating end of life care, grief groups, memorial services, and, long before they were common, a weekend camp for children and teens.
Diane has authored countless articles, patient-family education materials, and training materials for medical and ancillary staff, as well as a chapter on school re-entry for an American Cancer Society pediatric cancer textbook for nurses. Along with a 39 year history of supervising and mentoring students, her coordination of the Child Life internship program led to ACLP accreditation in 2017. She partnered with a local community college in designing their child life assistant program and field experience at Children’s MN.
Diane has contributed to the growth of our profession from its early stages in the Association for the Care of Children’s Health by contributing to the Values statement at the CLC’s Mission, Vision and Values conference, presenting at multiple CLC/ACLP conferences, reviewing abstracts, and actively engaging in the internship coordinator’s forum. She is known for modeling and teaching best practices to new and seasoned child life professionals and as a tireless advocate for exceptional psychosocial care.
2020 - Erin Munn, MS, CCLS
2020 - Erin Munn, MS, CCLS
2019 - Annette Bonjour, MS, CCLS
2019 - Annette Bonjour, MS, CCLS
Annette, MS, CCLS, has been a child life specialist for 16 years, working in a variety of clinical settings. For the past nine years, Annette has worked with the Adaptive Care Team (ACT) at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center (CCHMC). In 2015, she joined the Behavior Safety Team (BST) at CCHMC, where she collaborates with the interdisciplinary team to ensure healthcare encounters meet the unique needs of patients with developmental and behavioral challenges. Her work includes performing psychosocial assessments and conducting in-depth pre-visit planning to coordinate care for patients exhibiting escalating and aggressive behaviors in the medical setting. She designed a new build within the electronic health record and is leading the hospital-wide rollout for a pre-visit planning tool, which facilitates interdisciplinary collaboration and pre-planning in a centralized, shared care plan for patients with severe behaviors. In addition, she mentors fellow child life specialists, building their clinical skills to work with this vulnerable patient population.
Annette has a passion for utilizing scientific evidence and data to improve care for patients and families. After completing an assessment evidence-based practice project, Annette used quality improvement methodology as she led the implementation of the Psychosocial Risk Assessment in Pediatrics (PRAP) tool as the standardized assessment process for child life specialists at her institution. For several years she has served as co-chair for the Evidence-Based Practice/Quality Improvement/Research Education and Awareness Sub-Committee for the Association of Child Life Professionals Scientific Advancement of Professional Practice Committee. Currently, Annette leads several evidence-based practice projects and co-leads the hospital-wide Pain Task Force at Cincinnati Children’s. Annette holds a Master of Science Degree in Health Sciences and is currently pursuing an additional Master’s in Health Informatics, focusing on Healthcare Data Analytics.
2018 - Renee Savic, BS, CCLS
2018 - Renee Savic, BS, CCLS
Renee has been in the profession of child life since the early 1990s and began her career at Shriners Hospitals in Tampa, Florida. Renee spent 18 years there before joining the Johns Hopkins All Children’s team. Renee has been an active member of ACLP and has volunteered on various committees. Renee has held leadership roles in her local organization, the Florida Association of Child Life Professionals, including President, Member at Large, and Secretary. Educating students is an important part of Renee’s passion for the profession, and she has been a preceptor for students for over two decades.
2017 - Qi Cheng, MS, CCLS
2017 - Qi Cheng, MS, CCLS
In addition to spreading awareness of the importance of child life, Qi also invests in the growth of future child life professionals through teaching a child life course at Beijing Normal University and providing clinical supervision for interns. She began a volunteer program for university students and participated in multiple community and academic programs to increase student awareness of child life services. Qi’s persistent efforts in developing the skills and giftings of others demonstrate her deep commitment to the future of her profession.
2016 - Amy Kennedy, CCLS
2016 - Amy Kennedy, CCLS
Throughout her career, Amy has shown her commitment to the growth of future child life professionals through her work in the development of student programming and as a preceptor for interns and new specialists in the field. Likewise she is recognized and sought out by her peers as a mentor in their own development. Amy demonstrates her belief in the future of her profession through the many ways she helps others to learn, grow, and succeed.
2015 - Thomas L. Collins, MA, CCLS
2015 - Thomas L. Collins, MA, CCLS
Tom has been an active member of the Association of Child Life Professionals since 1983, with a long list of volunteer leadership roles to his credit. Highlights include serving on the ACLP Executive Board from 1994 to 1996, participating on numerous committees and task forces, including a term as chair of the Awards Committee, and collaborating with 50 invited child life professionals at the Vision-to-Action conferences in the 1990s. He has presented at multiple ACCH and child life conferences, as well as other venues, and served in a teaching role at Mills College, Pacific Oaks College, the University of San Francisco, and UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital Oakland, among a number of other institutions. He was a significant contributor to the publications Coping for Children and Families: Guidelines for Hospitals (1992) and Psychosocial Care of Children in Hospitals (1990).
2014 - Kathryn A. Davitt, MOT, CCLS, OTR
2014 - Kathryn A. Davitt, MOT, CCLS, OTR
Kat has been an active member of the child life professional community since the days of the Association for the Care of Children’s Health (ACCH). She has presented workshops at both child life and multidisciplinary conferences, and has been involved in child life conference planning and facilitation at the national and local level. She has published several articles, and co-authored the chapter on chronic illness and rehabilitation in the Handbook of Child Life (2009). Highlights of her involvement with ACLP include participating in both parts of ACLP’s Vision to Action conference (1996), serving as Secretary of the ACLP Executive Board (2006-2008), participating in the first Job Analysis and Certification Exam preparation; chairing the Conference Planning Committee (2006); and serving on a wide variety of ACLP committees over the years.
2013 - Stephanie Hopkinson, MA, CCLS
2013 - Stephanie Hopkinson, MA, CCLS
2012 - Gail Klayman, MEd, CCLS
2012 - Gail Klayman, MEd, CCLS
2011 - Elizabeth “Lissy” Zaremba, MA, CCLS
2011 - Elizabeth “Lissy” Zaremba, MA, CCLS
2010 - Bindy Sweett, CCLS