Stephanie Troutman Robbins, Ph.D.

Stephanie Troutman Robbins, Ph.D.

2022 Graduate Teaching and Mentoring Award for Graduate Education
Department Head and Associate Professor, Gender & Women's Studies, and Associate Professor, English
College of Social and Behavioral Sciences
Stephanie Troutman Robbins

Dr. Stephanie Troutman Robbins (she/her) is a Black feminist scholar, mother of three, and first-generation college student. She is the Department Head of Gender & Women’s Studies at the University of Arizona, and she is Associate Professor of Gender and Women’s Studies and English. She is a formally affiliated faculty member in Rhetoric, Composition and the Teaching of English, Africana Studies, the LGBT Institute, Global Studies, and Teaching, Learning &
Sociocultural Studies. She received a dual-PhD in Curriculum & Instruction and Women’s Studies from the Pennsylvania State University in 2011. A former high school and middle grades public school teacher, She is a scholar-activist who has been recognized across a variety of community and campus spaces for her mentorship, student advocacy, and social justice leadership. Her passion is working with marginalized students in the university setting at both the graduate and undergraduate levels. She is the recipient of the UArizona Likins Award, the Student Affairs Faculty Impact Award, the Dr. Maria Teresa Velez Outstanding Mentor Award, and the 2022 Outstanding Graduate Teaching and Mentoring Award. Stephanie is also an alum of the University’s 2017 Academic Leadership Institute cohort.

Dr. Troutman Robbins is the former director of two outreach projects between the University and Tucson schools: Wildcat Writers (2015- 2020) and the Southern Arizona Writing Project (2015-2020.) These partnership programs serve the local community by focusing on Title 1 schools and providing them with opportunities for professional development, academic resources, and programming rooted in diversity, equity, and inclusion through writing.

Her research interests include literacies focused on social justice, feminist pedagogy, critical race theory, film studies, Black feminist theory, schooling, identity/ies and education. She is co-author of the 2018 book, Narratives of Family Assets, Community Gifts, & Cultural Endowments: Re-Imagining the Invisible Knapsack (Lexington Press) and co-editor 2021’s Race & Ethnicity in US Television (ABC-CLIO/Greenwood Press). Her research has been published in the Journal of Girlhood Studies (GHS), the Journal of Race Ethnicity & Education (REE), Meridians: Feminism, Race and Transnationalism, Taboo: the Journal of Culture and Education, and in the Journal of Literacy & Social Responsibility.