Celebrating 2025-2026 Byck Scholarship Recipients

Please join us in congratulating these deserving recipients of the Judy Byck Scholarship!

Modupe Edogun, LCSWA, LCAS, spent ten years working as a biomedical engineer and then decided to pursue a long-held interest in mental health services. She completed her MSW at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and trained at Duke University’s Counseling Center and the Durham VA where she completed a Post-Master’s fellowship. She is dually licensed in social work and substance use. She currently sees clients through her private practice, Adawn Healing, PLLC. She believes that healing happens in relationship—with self, others, and the natural world. Her approach combines warmth and expertise, creating a space where clients feel both supported and empowered to grow. When Modupe is not in session, you will find her being restored by spending time at church or in nature, enjoying West African dance classes, crafting, or sharing laughter with her family. These activities not only bring her joy but also inform her holistic approach to wellness and healing.

Sarah Blair Jenkins, LCSW, CST is a clinical social worker and certified sex therapist living and working in Asheville, NC. She is passionate about the intersection of psychoanalytic theory and systems thinking, as well as cultivating a praxis that attends to the intrapsychic, interpersonal, and sociopolitical. In the tradition of Freud and his dog Jofi, she has registered therapy pitbull named Moe who comes to sessions with her. 

Beth Ross, LCSW, lives in Durham, NC and graduated with a MSW from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2020. She is currently a therapist specializing in grief, trauma and management of chronic illness, and she is looking forward to deepening my education with the Judy Byck scholarship!

Erin Smith, MSW, LCSW, is a recent graduate of UNC-Chapel Hill’s Master of Social Work Program with a concentration in Direct Practice. She has since obtained her LCSWA and will begin accepting individual clients at Oak City Psychology in Raleigh, a group practice focused on eating disorder recovery. She practiced psychodynamic therapy during her final practicum year and has professional interest in psychodynamic theory, child-centered play therapy, and eating disorder recovery.

Emma Weichmann, LCSWA, currently works at a non-profit to provide no-cost therapy to survivors of sexual assault and intimate partner violence, and also works in a group practice setting. She has previously worked in a Batterer’s Intervention Treatment program, with incarcerated youth, and as a graduate assistant increasing mental health access to students at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.