College of Education Faculty

Fouad Abd El Khalick

Fouad Abd El Khalick

Associate Professor

My past interests include investigating science teachers' pedagogical content knowledge, and global and specific subject matter structures, and the use of concept maps as learning and assessment tools. My research focuses on the teaching and learning about nature of science (NOS) in grades K-12, and in preservice and inservice science teacher education settings.more information...

Kern Alexander

Kern Alexander

Professor

Kern Alexander’s current research interests include education finance and law. He has worked extensively as an expert in state school finance litigation. He is the Editor of the Journal of Education Finance and has recently completed a major revision of his widely-used graduate text, American Public School Law. Having served as president of two public universities, Alexander has an ongoing research interest in high education administrating, finance, and law.more information...

Gene Amberg

Gene Amberg

Clinical Assistant Professor

Gene Amberg brings a wealth of practitioner knowledge to the professoriate. His educational career spans years of experience in public schools, including 25 years as a practicing superintendent. Because of his 15-year tenure as superintendent of Urbana School District 116, his leadership experience in the large unit school district setting and his service to diverse communities has given him broad perspective on public education in the United States.more information...

Carolyn Anderson

Carolyn Anderson

Professor

Measurements in the social and behavioral sciences are often discrete (e.g., highest degree earned, response option selected on a survey or test, career choice). My research lies at the intersection of statistical models for multivariate discrete data and psychometrics. My current focus is on models with latent variable interpretations, including item response theory models, discrete choice models, and their formulations as generalized linear and non-linear (mixed) models (i.e., HLM, and GLMMS).more information...

James D. Anderson

James D. Anderson

Head / Gutsgell Professor

James D. Anderson (Ph.D. Illinois), is the author of The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860-1935, which received the Outstanding Book Award of the American Educational Research Association (AERA). His most current work is the forthcoming No Sacrifice Too Great: The History of African American Education from Slavery to the Twenty-First Century. He received the Distinguished Career Contributions Award from AERA’s Committee on Scholars of Color in Education. He served as advisor to and participant in the PBS documentaries “School” 2001), and “The Percy Julian Story” (2007). He is the Senior Editor of the History of Education Quarterly. In 2008 he was elected to the National Academy of Education.more information...

Richard Anderson

Richard Anderson

Professor

I currently have two active programs of research. The first is comparative analysis of learning to read alphabetic and nonalphabetic languages, especially English and Chinese. The second examines children's intellectual and social development in the context of free-flowing open-format discussions.more information...

No image available

Thomas Anderson

Professor Emeritus

My past research has focused on how children learn to read and study expository text, especially science text. I am currently investigating the techniques, especially peer mediation, that students and teacher can use to resolve interpersonal and intragroup conflict in the school setting. My goal is to develop and implement and evaluate the effects of a "peaceable" school, e.g., one that is eager to get beyond the restrictions of a discipline system which emphasizes punishment and various other sanctions.more information...

Steven Aragon

Steven Aragon

Associate Professor

My research interests include teaching and learning models for minorities and non-traditional students; secondary to post-secondary transition models; professional development of community college faculty and staff; use of evaluation.more information...

Bonnie Armbruster

Bonnie Armbruster

Professor

Bonnie B. Armbruster is Professor and Associate Head for Undergraduate and Certification Programs. Her area of research specialization is reading in the content areas, or reading to learn. Bonnie teaches reading and language arts methods courses for elementary education candidates as well as graduate courses in reading and writing across the curriculum and informational children’s literature. With a strong interest in service learning, Bonnie also teaches a “community engagement” course in which students tutor in local schools.more information...

Lorenzo Baber

Lorenzo Baber

Assistant Professor

Lorenzo Baber’s primary research agenda focuses on the impact of socioeconomic background and ethnicity on identity development and academic outcomes for postsecondary students. He is particularly interested in investigating the persistent educational achievement gap between minority and majority students at Predominately White Institutions. Additional research interests include examination of university-neighborhood partnership initiatives in urban communities and international comparative education.more information...

Arthur Baroody

Arthur Baroody

Professor

Art Baroody is a Professor of Curriculum & Instruction (early childhood and elementary mathematics education) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His research focuses on the teaching and learning of basic counting, number, and arithmetic concepts and skills by young children and those with learning problems. Grants: Spencer Foundation (“Key Transitions in Preschoolers’ Number and Arithmetic Development; 7/03–12/09), National Institutes of Health (“Computer-guided Comprehensive Mathematics Assessment for Young Children”; 10/05–9/10), and the U.S. Dept. of Education (“Developing an Intervention to Foster Early Number Sense and Skill”; 6/05–6/09); and “Fostering Fluency with Basic Addition and Subtraction”; 7/08–6/12).more information...

Eurydice Bouchereau Bauer

Eurydice Bouchereau Bauer

Associate Professor

My research projects focus on alternative literacy assessment, biliteracy development, and preservice education. Specifically, I have researched critical inquiry pedagogy for examining diversity in the teaching of undergraduate and graduate courses, emergent literacy development across two languages, and the literacy and assessment development of elementary students (preschool to grade 5) from diverse linguistic and cultural backgrounds.more information...

Johnell Bentz

Johnell Bentz

Clinical Assistant Professor

more information...

Tina (A.C.) Besley

Tina (A.C.) Besley

Research Professor

My research interests include educational policy and philosophy, especially Michel Foucault’s work on self/subjectivity and governmentality; the knowledge economy, creativity and academic entrepreneurship; assessing research quality in Higher Education; and youth issues, especially self and identity in a globalised world where the impact of new social media is now becoming apparent. I am interested in narrative approaches in research and counseling. I am on the editorial boards of seven journals and three book series and have published five books including Subjectivity and Truth: Foucault, Education and the Culture of the Self ( Peter Lang, 2007) with Michael A. Peters.more information...

Debra Bragg

Debra Bragg

Professor

Debra Bragg’s research focuses on transition to college by youth and adults, especially student populations that have not attended college historically. She is particularly interested in how underserved youth and adult students (minority, low income, first-generation, immigrant students) use the community college to transition to higher education, including how public policies position community colleges as a primary port of entry. The expanding mission of community colleges, including the increasing importance of linkages to high schools, adult education, postsecondary education and the workforce is of particular interest. Her work is affiliated with the Office of Community College Research and Leadership (OCCRL)more information...

Liora Bresler

Liora Bresler

Professor

Liora Bresler's current program of research centers on arts education (music, visual art, dance, and drama) in both formal (K-12 schools) and informal settings. Her current project, in the US and internationally, is an inter-disciplinary project at the intersection of performing arts studies, aesthetics, anthropology, and education, focusing on educational and aesthetic values of arts centers and the experiential learning they provoke and inspire. An recent area of interest is intellectual and social entrepreneurship across disciplines in academe.more information...

David Brown

David Brown

Associate Professor

David Brown’s research focuses on the dynamics of instructional interactions in science. This research focus is informed by a complex dynamic systems perspective on the various dynamics involved with instructional interactions, including social, affective, and particularly conceptual dynamics. Instructional contexts include classroom instruction, tutoring, and technology assisted instruction. A current focus draws on this theoretical perspective in the design of online instructional environments.more information...

Nicholas Burbules

Nicholas Burbules

Professor

My research focuses on philosophy of education; teaching and dialogue; critical social and political theory; and technology and education. My major current projects include work on ethical and policy issues concerning new technologies in education; virtual reality; collaboration; and dialogue and "third spaces.more information...

Timothy Reese Cain

Timothy Reese Cain

Assistant Professor

Tim Cain’s research examines academic freedom, student speech, unionization in higher education, and related issues. His current projects include studies of the failed attempts to organize college instructors and professors in the years after World War I and an investigation into the lasting consequences of politically-motivated faculty dismissals.more information...

Janis Chadsey

Janis Chadsey

Professor Emeritus

I am concerned with the social integration experienced by youth and young adults as they make their transition from school to adulthood. Through the Transition Research Institute, I have studied the social interactions and relationships experienced by youths in both school and employment settings; have conducted research designed to teach social skills; and have studied the meaning of social integration from the perspective of youths themselves. In addition to this research, I have conducted research studying practices that facilitate spontaneous communication and expand pragmatic functions of learners with low incidence disabilities. I am actively involved in our teacher certification program.more information...

Hua-hua Chang

Hua-hua Chang

Associate Professor

My current research focuses on both theoretical development and applications of item response theory (IRT). These include computer-based assessment, automated test assembly (ATA), differential item functioning (DIF), cognitive diagnostic measurement, and patients reported outcome. Today one of the main challenges in Educational Measurement is to develop theories and methods for the new mode of large scale implementation of computerized assessment. More recently I have been concentrating on developing item selection methods for computerized adaptive testing (CAT). Several new methods have been developed, such as the a-stratified method, the global information method, and the constraint weighted information (CWI) method.more information...

Kiel Christianson

Kiel Christianson

Assistant Professor

Kiel Christianson's research focuses on language comprehension and production. Specifically, he's interested in how people arrive at interpretations of language input, especially when those interpretations are not consistent with the input (i.e., misinterpretations) but still might be "good enough" for normal communication. This research is being extended to non-native speakers, aphasic speakers, and specialized content areas, such as math/physics word problems (STEM). He is also conducting research in bilingual sentence processing and production, visual word recognition and reading, and psycholinguistics in several other languages.more information...

Renee Clift

Renee Clift

Professor

Professor Clift investigates factors that affect the process of learning to teach, which includes preservice teachers’ learning, educators’ continuing professional development, and educational leadership. Her current work focuses on the transition from preservice teacher education programs to the first six years of teaching. Professor Clift also serves as the Director for the Illinois New Teacher Collaborative (http://intc.ed.uiuc.edu). Based at the College of Education, the collaborative is a statewide, voluntary consortium of stakeholders who are concerned with recruiting and retaining talented educators for all schools.more information...

Jeanne Connell

Jeanne Connell

Lecturer

My current research interests focus philosophy of education, particularly how the American pragmatic philosophy of John Dewey influences views about knowledge, learning, and teaching. In my recent articles, I analyzed the connection between pragmatic philosophy and the literary theory of Louise Rosenblatt, who was a pioneer in developing what is known in the field of reading as reader-response-theory. I explored how these diverse disciplines inform one another in order to enhance democratic education. My current projects focus on philosophy of education, transaction-based literary theory, as well as the teaching of social foundations of education to pre-service teachers.more information...

Denise Crews

Denise Crews

Clinical Assistant Professor

Dr. Crews’ current research interests surround higher education access and community college student patterns of success. Included under this research umbrella are community college transitional programs which promote college readiness for academic core courses, and the interventions and curriculum alignment models utilized to facilitate college success.more information...

No image available

Michele Crockett

Assistant Professor

Michele Crockett’s research includes issues of education policy, school reform, and institutional contexts, especially as these issues relate to teachers’ professional learning for improving mathematics instruction and achievement at underperforming schools. Presently, she seeks to understand how formative assessment practices in teachers’ mathematics instruction can directly improve students’ deep mathematical understandings and the implications for refocusing school-based professional development efforts.more information...

Gary Cziko

Gary Cziko

Professor Emeritus

My past research has focused on first and second language acquisition, language assessment, bilingual education, research methods, and the application of evolutionary theory and perceptual control theory to understanding human behavior, learning and education. I am currently focusing my research activities on what I call Autonomous Technology-Assisted Language Learning (ATALL). ATALL involves using and developing technology, in particular Internet media and communication tools, to enhance education in foreign-languages and cultures.more information...

Antonia Darder

Antonia Darder

Professor

Over the years, my scholarship has focused on comparative studies of structural inequalities as these manifest within a variety of schooling and societal context. More recently, my research has turned toward examinations of culture and identity in a transnational context, issues of the body related to teaching and learning, and questions of Puerto Rican feminism and consciousness. My teaching examines cultural issues, racism, and class inequalities within education, with an emphasis on identity, language, and popular culture, as well as the foundations of critical pedagogy, Latino studies, and social justice theory. I am the author of Culture and Power in the Classroom (Bergin & Garvey, 1991)more information...

No image available

Christina DeNicolo

Assistant Professor

My broad research interests include equity and the literacy education of culturally and linguistically diverse students, biliteracy in multilingual classrooms, and student use of cultural and linguistic resources in language arts classrooms. An additional focus of mine is the development of cross-cultural understandings by teachers and students in multicultural settings. Currently, I am interested in the influence of teacher ideology on literacy instruction in schools experiencing an increase in bilingual and multilingual students. My goal is to develop an understanding of why some teachers embrace the opportunity to work with bilingual students and others do not.more information...

Lizanne DeStefano

Lizanne DeStefano

Executive Associate Dean for Research and Administration

I am interested in evaluation of large scale, multi-site initiatives, especially those involving special populations such as very young children and their families, students with disabilities, and members of traditionally underrepresented groups. My research has focused on the use of participatory designs and qualitative and quantitative methods in these large complex projects. I am also interested in technical and policy issues surrounding the inclusion of students with diverse educational needs in assessment based accountability initiatives.more information...

No image available

Pradeep Dhillon

Associate Professor

My research straddles philosophy of language (both Analytic and Continental) and mind, aesthetics, and international education. I have a strong interest in Kantian value theory as it relates to aesthetics,cognition,and human rights education. Currently, I am working in the areas of Kant's theory of judgement and Neuro-aesthetics, Neurophilosophy,and Education, and Environmental Aesthetics.I am the Editor for the Journal of Aesthetic Education, and serve as the Chair of Education for the American Society for Aesthetics.more information...

Mark Dressman

Mark Dressman

Associate Professor

My research investigates the underlying cultural, philosophical, economic, and historical assumptions that shape research and practice in the teaching of reading and writing across a wide range of topics. The goal of this research is to refine and improve current practice in language and literacy curriculum and teaching. Currently, I am working on three projects. One is a study of the teaching of poetry in U.S. secondary schools from the early twentieth century to the present.more information...

Jose Dutra

Jose Dutra

Visiting Scholar

Dr. Dutra received his Ph.D. in Accounting Information System from the University of Sao Paulo/ Brazil, a Master`s Degree in Computer Science at UNICAMP/ Brazil, and a Bachelor`s degree degree in Engineering at FAAP/Brazil. Dr. Dutra currently teaches Decision Support System and Information System for Accounting Department at University of Sao Paulo (Ribeirao Preto Campus). His research interests include (1) Information System, (2) Program and course evaluation, (2) Learning Technology in E-Learning, and (3) Personalized online Instruction.more information...

Stacy Dymond

Stacy Dymond

Associate Professor

My research interests focus on curriculum and instruction for students with significant cognitive disabilities in inclusive school and community settings.  I am particularly interested in the use of service learning as a form of pedagogy for promoting access to academics and life skills curriculum.more information...

No image available

Anne Haas Dyson

Professor

My research focuses on language and literacy development in the early childhood years. By literacy, I do not mean simply children's handwriting and spelling; I mean children's use of print to represent their ideas and to interact with other people. I use qualitative and sociolinguistic research procedures to examine written language use from children's points of view--from within their own social lives. I have aimed to situate children's literacy development within the social and ideological complexity of urban schools and contemporary times.more information...

Andrea Ellinger

Andrea Ellinger

Associate Professor

My passion and long-term research agenda has been to understand how managers and leaders serve as facilitators of learning within learning-oriented organizational contexts. My research has focused on examining the informal learning behaviors that managers and leaders enact, the catalysts for learning, beliefs associated with such behaviors, and the outcomes of learning episodes at the individual, and organizational levels. This main area of research has resulted in subsequent streams of inquiry related to assessing the learning organization concept and financial performance, creating managerial and supervisory coaching behavior measures and examining the relationships between such coaching and job satisfaction and performance.more information...

Dorothy Espelage

Dorothy Espelage

Professor

The foci of my scholarship at UIUC have included investigations of several health-related behaviors, including bullying and youth aggression, disordered eating in adolescents and young adults, and psychosocial adjustment of families of children managing chronic illness. The majority of my energy is spent on my first two programs bullying during early adolescence and eating disorders. Within the last few years, both of these programs have evolved into the study of these health behaviors during early adolescence and both have included examination of the influences of the peer group on their maintenance. I also work with graduate students with research interests in childhood sexual abuse and dating violence.more information...

No image available

Rupert Evans

Professor Emeritus

more information...

Helen Farmer

Helen Farmer

Professor Emeritus

Working with her research team, Helen Farmer has focused her research on investigating why women contribute less to the arts and sciences than men. The model developed to investigate this topic is a shift away from models that propose that internal psychological and biological factors are the cause of women’s lesser contributions in these areas. Instead, they investigated the contribution of external factors that women and men experience growing up as well as psychological and biological factors. Experiences in the family, community, and the school all are predicted to affect women’s motivation to contribute to society.more information...

Walter Feinberg

Walter Feinberg

Professor Emeritus

My research centers on the issue of education for democratic citizenship. I believe that democracy is not an automatically self-renewing process but it that is requires conscious collective attention and deliberate educational and cultural work. Hence all of my research projects, from my studies of multiculturalism, to my examination of the justification for affirmative action, to my exploration of religious education, to my evaluation of the idea of school choice, are intended to understand the relationship between education and democracy and to find ways to enhance what I believe to be our most valuable inheritance.more information...

Tweety Felner

Tweety Felner

Research Assistant Professor

Tweety Yates' research interests include parent-child interaction and personnel development issues in early childhood. She is currently evaluating the validity and feasibility of a parent-child relationship-based model of early intervention in culturally and geographically diverse settings. She is also involved in training, outreach, and evaluation of a story-based creative arts curriculum derived from a variety of cultural and ethnic traditions designed to promote child learning and early literacy skills.more information...

Jeffrey Flesher

Jeffrey Flesher

Clinical Assistant Professor

Jeff Flesher is Clinical Assistant Professor in the Department of Human Resource Education and Vice President of Staffing and Training at Biomet, Inc. Previously, he held senior management positions in learning and organization development at Underwriters Laboratories, Abbott Laboratories and Commonwealth Edison, Inc. Jeff has also held academic appointments at Roosevelt University, Southern Illinois University, and Iowa State University. Dr. Flesher received his Ph.D. in Education, Training and Development from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, a Master's degree in Technology Education from Eastern Illinois University, and a Bachelor's degree in History from the University of the State of New York.more information...

Priscilla Fortier

Priscilla Fortier

Adjunct Assistant Professor

more information...

Susan Fowler

Susan Fowler

Professor

Susan Fowler is active in research related to families of young children with developmental delays and issues involving access to early care and education. She involves graduate students in her research and scholarship. Recent studies with graduate students have included survey and analysis of early care and education providers with a focus on ECSE teachers; involvement of families in story book reading routines with children at risk for school problems and assessment of family supports in helping children with developmental delays develop friendships. She receives funding for her work from state and federal agencies.more information...

Janet Gaffney

Janet Gaffney

Professor

Janet S. Gaffney is a professor in the Department of Special Education with affiliate appointments in the Departments of Educational Psychology and Curriculum and Instruction at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC). Her research focuses on developing teachers' expertise to facilitate the independent literacy learning of children and youth with and without disabilities who are not making adequate progress. She works collaboratively with district partners to design organic, high-impact, system-wide, long-term, professional development opportunities that lead to documented and sustainable literacy outcomes for children.more information...

Georgia Earnest Garcia

Georgia Earnest Garcia

Professor

My past research projects have focused on the literacy instruction, assessment, and development of students (preschool-8) from diverse linguistic and cultural backgrounds, with a special interest in bilingual students' reading. My current research interests include investigating cross-linguistic transfer in bilingual students' reading and writing (Spanish-English speakers and Chinese-English speakers), the literacy engagement and motivation of bilingual students, and the use of new forms of literacy assessments with students from diverse backgrounds. I also am interested in studying how assessment and instructional reform efforts affect the reading instruction and performance of students from diverse backgrounds.more information...

Jennifer Greene

Jennifer Greene

Professor

Jennifer’s research interests focus on the intersections of social science and social policy. Her work in the domain of educational and social program evaluation seeks to advance the theory and practice of alternative forms of evaluation, including qualitative, democratic, and mixed methods evaluation approaches. Current work emphasizes evaluation as a venue for democratizing dialogue about critical social and educational issues, with a focus on conceptualizing evaluation as a "public good.more information...

Rochelle Gutierrez

Rochelle Gutierrez

Associate Professor

Dr. Rochelle Gutierrez' scholarship focuses on equity issues in mathematics education, paying particular attention to how race, class, and language affect teaching and learning. Through in-depth analyses of effective teaching/learning communities and longitudinal studies of developing teachers, her work challenges deficit views of Latina/o and African American students. Her current research projects focus upon: developing in pre-service teachers the knowledge and disposition to teach powerful mathematics to urban students; the role of uncertainty and "Nepantla" as it relates to teaching; and teacher community and secondary mathematics teaching in México, for which she received a Fulbright fellowship.more information...

Donald G. Hackmann

Donald G. Hackmann

Associate Professor and Interim Head

Don Hackmann’s primary research agenda focuses on leadership preparation programming, including program quality, standards-based curricula, and characteristics of tenure-line and clinical educational leadership faculty members. An additional research interest addresses the principalship, focusing on effective leadership behaviors and strategies at the middle and high school levels that facilitate improved student learning, including effective supervisory approaches and the development of effective scheduling models.more information...

James Halle

James Halle

Professor

For more than 20 years I have been involved in research related to communication and language development of children with disabilities. This program of research has focused on examining both social communication of young children with significant intellectual disability, and the ecological factors that facilitate and discourage communicative growth. I have also worked on developing interventions to encourage more effective and efficient communication by these children. Recent projects include assessing current dictionaries of prelinguistic forms used by children with severe disabilities to communicate and the functions (e.g., request, protest, comment) these forms serve for the children.more information...

James Hannum

James Hannum

Clinical Professor (Counseling Chair)

My research interests include the ways in which relationships (marriage, family, and friendships) impact how people cope with significant life stressors and ways that relationships may contribute to pathological conditions such as eating disorders. From a therapeutic standpoint, I am interested in how relationship variables in helping relationships affect the outcome of treatment.more information...

Violet Harris

Violet Harris

Assoc Dean for Academic Affairs

I maintain active interest and conduct research in the areas of children's literature, multicultural children's literature, children's book publishing, the historic development of African American literacy, and the creation of literacy materials created specifically for African Americans. More broadly, I am interested in literacy, socio-cultural influences on literacy and schooling, and teacher education. Currently, I am working on a content analysis of historic literacy materials for African American children and monitoring two trends in children's literature: biracial/multiracial children and religion.more information...

Robert Henderson

Robert Henderson

Professor Emeritus

Professor Henderson’s research activities during his 50 years at Illinois cover four areas: prevention of brain damage by early detection and dietary treatment of inborn errors of metabolism, especially Phenylketonuria (PKU); effectiveness and efficiency of service delivery systems for students with disabilities; equity in financing special education programs in the USA and Canada; comparative evaluation of service delivery systems worldwide. He serves on the editorial board of several USA and international professional journals in Special Education.more information...

Nancy Hertzog

Nancy Hertzog

Associate Professor

At the core of my research program is the question, "In what ways can teachers challenge all children in inclusive elementary classrooms?" This question ties two thrusts of my research program together: interest in instructional strategies that challenge all children; and interest in gifted programming practices. Beginning with my introduction into research methodology, I have been approaching this broad research question systematically by looking at instructional practices which have typically been designed for students regarded as gifted, and I have been examining the impact and perspectives of gifted programming practices from the students and families who have been involved in them.more information...

Christopher Higgins

Christopher Higgins

Assistant Professor

My scholarly interests fall into two main areas: philosophy of teaching and the aims of education. My work in the first area concerns teacher motivation and identity, transformative dialogue and the teacher-student relationship as well as teacher education and professional development. I am currently completing a book entitled The Good Life of Teaching: Pedagogy and the Paradox of Self Interest which examines how the practice of teaching fits into the teacher's own quest to lead a rich, meaningful, or excellent life.more information...

Jacquetta Hill

Jacquetta Hill

Professor Emeritus

more information...

Wen-Hao Huang

Wen-Hao Huang

Assistant Professor

W. David Huang’s academic background, consisting of material science & engineering, educational technology, and executive business administration, has enabled him to conduct interdisciplinary projects for instructional and research purposes for years. Dr. Huang currently teaches Learning Technologies and Instructional Design for HRE with an interactive approach. His research interests include (1) design of serious games and workforce development, (2) cognitive load manipulations in E-Learning settings, and (3) development of entrepreneurship education. David is also co-coordinating and co-developing HRE’s MSEd program in E-Learning (delivered by University of Illinois Global Campus) with Dr. Scott Johnson since June 2007.more information...

Barbara Hug

Barbara Hug

Clinical Assistant Professor

My research focuses on developing and using curriculum materials that support inquiry learning in science. There exists a need to develop curriculum materials that help public school teachers and students meet key learning goals aligned with national standards focusing on inquiry as an instructional strategy. Much of my work to date has addressed this need by working on developing materials that allow students to engage in such extended inquiry investigations. I then examine the use of these materials in the context of middle school classrooms.more information...

Mary-Alayne Hughes

Mary-Alayne Hughes

Clinical Assistant Professor

more information...

Richard Hunter

Richard Hunter

Professor

Richard Hunter is known for his extensive public school administrative experience in public education and for his academic research on topics in urban education, while teaching at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.more information...

Stanley Ikenberry

Stanley Ikenberry

Regent Professor and President Emeritus

Stan Ikenberry, the former president of the University of Illinois and of the American Council of Education, teaches courses on higher education policy and leadership and serves as advisor to doctoral students. In addition, he holds an appointment as Senior Fellow in the University’s Institute of Government and Public Affairs and is Co-director of the Forum for the Future of Public Education. His current areas of interest include higher education assessment, public attitudes about higher education, and privatization of public universities.more information...

No image available

Margaret Jobe

Adjunct Assistant Professor

more information...

Scott Johnson

Scott Johnson

CIO / Associate Dean for Online Learning

Scott Johnson’s current program of research explores ways to improve the quality and effectiveness of instruction. His primary research has examined the cognitive process differences that enable experts to solve technical problems more efficiently than novices. Recent studies have explored various aspects of online learning and factors that support the development of effective virtual teams. He has also been involved in studies to identify strategies that enhance technology transfer. The ultimate goal of his research is to develop new understanding of learning processes so that more effective instructional designs and strategies can be developed to improve technical instruction.more information...

Marilyn Johnston-Parsons

Marilyn Johnston-Parsons

Professor

Dr. Parson’s current research interests include educational reform related to teacher education and social studies education particularly related to issues of social justice and diversity. She is also interested in collaborative research methodologies, urban education, and action/teacher research and self-study. Recently Dr. Parsons published a book with teachers from a mid-western urban school which describes the ways in which learning successes happen daily in a school that is labeled "failing" by its test scores. She is currently working on a research project in an urban Chicago school working collaboratively with teachers to integrated social studies and content area writing.more information...

Mary Kalantzis

Mary Kalantzis

Dean

Dean of the College of Education and Professor of Education, Department of Curriculum and Instruction at the University of Illinios. Adjunct professor at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia, attached to the Globailsm Institute and Research Director of the Knowledge Design Forum. With Bill Cope, co-author of: The Powers of Literacy, Falmer Press, London, 1993, Productive Diversity, Pluto Press, Sydney, 1997; A Place in the Sun: Re-Creating the Australian Way of Life, Harper Collins, Sydney, 2000; Multiliteracies: Literacy Learning and the Design of Social Futures, Routledge, London, 2000; and Learning by Design, Victorian Schools Innovation Commission, Melbourne, 2005.more information...

No image available

Russell Korte

Assistant Professor

My interests include investigating and understanding the social dynamics of learning and working in organizations. Recently, I have been studying the socialization experiences of newly hired engineers; specifically how they learned the social norms, that is, the unwritten rules of the organizations they joined. Related to this I have conducted research with the Center for the Advancement of Engineering Education (CAEE). This work entailed studying the experiences of engineering students as they learned their profession in school. Both of these streams of research indicate the primacy of the social system in forming workers’ and students’ knowledge and practices.more information...

Brad Kose

Brad Kose

Assistant Professor

Brad Kose’s research investigates how transformative principal leadership and teacher professional development influence and impact teaching practices and equitable student outcomes through qualitative and quantitative studies. Dr. Kose’s research helps illuminate how school principals can provide high-quality teacher learning opportunities for improving all students’—and especially traditionally marginalized students’—academic, social-emotional, multicultural, and citizenship development. This research suggests that contemporary theories often overlook the principal’s important role in supporting teachers’ social identity development and capacity for working with diverse students.more information...

K. Peter Kuchinke

K. Peter Kuchinke

Associate Professor

Professor Kuchinke's current research focuses on two areas: The education and training of educators working in human resource development settings in for-profit and not-for-profit organizations around the world as these professional lead learning initiatives to foster organizational and individual growth and development. Professor Kuchinke further explores the changing meaning of working as technological, economic, political, and social forces bring unprecedented rates of change to individuals, families, organizations, and countries. In both research areas, Professor Kuchinke is published widely and is a sought-after lecturer and presenter at national and international conferences and universities and organizations around the world.more information...

James Leach

James Leach

Professor

My research and development projects have focused on the relationship of career and technical education to training and development in the private sector, including the direction of research projects of local, state, and national scope within these areas. An important goal of this research has been to determine the knowledge base required for success as a technical educator in business and industry settings and to initiate discussion of the related important policy implications. A related objective is to identify and study the nature (in addition to professional knowledge) of exemplary technical educators working in the private sector.more information...

Adrienne Lo

Adrienne Lo

Assistant Professor

My research in linguistic anthropology explores how Korean American children who attended classes at community based educational organizations in a multiethnic community in California were socialized to culturally specific frameworks of language, morality, and emotion. Using discourse analysis of classroom interactions, I examine how second generation students were positioned as moral subjects through narratives, codeswitching, evidential frameworks, and epistemic particles.more information...

Jane Loeb

Jane Loeb

Professor Emeritus

more information...

No image available

Michael Loui

Affiliate

Together with undergraduate and graduate students, Professor Loui conducts research in ethics in engineering and computing, and in the scholarship of teaching and learning. They have studied the student learning outcomes of an elective course on professional ethics, and the effectiveness of peer-led team learning in a large freshman course. Professor Loui's current research projects include the assessment of role-play scenarios for teaching responsible conduct of research, and the development of concept inventories for three fundamental subjects in computer science.more information...

Christopher Lubienski

Christopher Lubienski

Associate Professor

Chris Lubienski's research centers on public and private interests in education, including the use of market mechanisms such as choice and competition to improve schooling, especially for disadvantaged children. His work examines reforms and movements such as vouchers, charter schools, tuition tax credits, and home schooling that seek to decentralize and deregulate educational governance. He focuses on outcomes anticipated by reformers in areas such as increased innovation and higher levels of achievement, exploring the frequent disconnect between research findings and policy advocacy. He is currently investigating the organizational behavior of schools and districts in local education markets in metropolitan areas.more information...

Sarah Lubienski

Sarah Lubienski

Associate Professor

Dr. Sarah Lubienski's scholarship centers around intersections of education and equity, focusing on mathematics achievement, instruction, and reform. Through quantitative studies of NAEP and ECLS-K data, as well as qualitative studies of classrooms, she examines inequities in diverse students' mathematics learning experiences and outcomes. Dr. Lubienski has served as the chairperson of both AERA's NAEP Studies SIG and the Editorial Panel for the Journal for Research in Mathematics Education. She currently co-directs an Illinois Math-Science Partnership and was recently awarded IES funding for a study on gender, race/ethnicity, and SES in ECLS-K mathematics data.more information...

Cris Mayo

Cris Mayo

Associate Professor

Cris Mayo's research interests include philosophy of education, gender and sexuality studies, and multicultural theory. Her book, Disputing the Subject of Sex (Rowman and Littlefield, 2004, reprinted in paperback, 2007) details clashes over AIDS education and gay inclusive multicultural education in New York State in the 1980's and 1990's. She is currently researching gay/straight alliances in public schools and their work in the formation of associational identities, examining how such groups organize around and address differences of race, ethnicity, gender, gender identity, and sexuality.more information...

Sarah McCarthey

Sarah McCarthey

Professor

Sarah McCarthey's research focuses on teachers' writing instruction within current policy contexts such as NCLB. Sarah has explored teachers' integration of writing in their science instruction with Margery Osborne and local teachers. Her work with Georgia Garcia in understanding English language learners' writing practices has contributed to the national dialogue on literacy instruction. As co-editor (with Mark Dressman and Paul Prior) of Research in the Teaching of English, Sarah has been in the forefront of publishing outstanding literacy research. Her leadership in the University of Illinois Writing Project has linked the College of Education with local schools, Writing Studies, and the National Writing Project.more information...

Erica McClure

Erica McClure

Professor Emeritus

My research has had three foci: children's acquisition of English and Spanish, reading, and conversational codeswitching (Romanian-Saxon, Spanish-English, Bulgarian-English and Romanian-Bulgarian). My current projects include content analysis and grammatical analysis of children's stories written in English and Spanish, the description of Romanian-Bulgarian codeswitching, the description of Assyrian-English codeswitching, the description of the role of the maintenance of Assyrian language skills in the maintenance of Assyrian ethnic identity.more information...

Jeanette McCollum

Jeanette McCollum

Professor Emeritus

My research interests have led me into three separate but interrelated areas of study,: (a) social interaction between infants with disabilities and their caregivers and the implications of these interactions for the infant's optimal development: (b) personnel training approaches that enable university students and working professionals to develop professional competencies related to infants with disabilities and their families; and (c) policy issues related to personnel working with infants with disabilities and their families. I have conducted several studies describing the work roles and professional qualifications of early intervention personnel.more information...

George McConkie

George McConkie

Professor Emeritus

Past research has focused on understanding the real-time processes involved in reading and picture perception. This work has mainly been conducted using research methods based on the recording of eye movements. My current research includes the following projects: 1. Cognition and Eye Movement Control during Reading. (UIUC Research Board grant). The goal of this project is to understand how cognitive processes influence eye behavior, so that eye movement data can be used more effectively in the study of cognition. 2. NSF-ITR: Multimodal Human Computer Interaction: Toward a Proactive Computer. (Tom Huang and McConkie, co-PI's) An interdisciplinary project (6 faculty members)more information...

Jose Mestre

Jose Mestre

Professor

I am interested in how people learn and solve problems in the STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) disciplines. I work at the interface of science learning and cognitive science (e.g., visual cognition, reading comprehension, nature of expertise, transfer of learning). Using techniques common in cognitive science (e.g., eye-tracking, reading speed) but heretofore not used to study science learning, I am attempting to learn details about how both experts and novices store, retrieve and apply knowledge. Ongoing investigations include explorations of the role of misconceptions in comprehending scientific text, visual processing of diagrams in problems, and conceptual problem solving.more information...

No image available

Karla J. Moller

Clinical Associate Professor

My interests are focused on literacy education at the elementary level, specifically in the areas of multiethnic and multicultural literature. My most recent research is on heterogeneous grouping, literature discussion groups, conceptualizations of struggling and capability with regards to literacy events, and engagement and dialogue of children, pre-service, and in-service teachers related to reading culturally diverse literature with social justice themes. I am also involved in working with local area teachers to create support structures for pre-service and in-service teachers who are seeking to expand their learning.more information...

Bekisizwe Ndimande

Bekisizwe Ndimande

Assistant Professor

Bekisizwe Ndimande's research interests include the politics of curriculum and examining the policies and practices in post-apartheid desegregated public schools and the implications of school "choice" for disadvantaged communities. His current research on these issues also provides a comparative analysis between the United States and post-apartheid South Africa.more information...

Helen Neville

Helen Neville

Professor

Historically, my research interests have focused on three interrelated areas: general and cultural factors influencing stress and coping processes, evaluation of the effectiveness of diversity-related programs, and multicultural education. My research in the first area has centered on examining general and cultural factors influencing rape survivors, post-assault recovery process and African American students' psychosocial and educational adjustment to predominantly white universities. I am particularly interested in understanding common experiences that transcend race, ethnicity, and class background in adjusting to stressful events, as well as teasing out the more culture-specific factors related to this adjustment.more information...

Susan Noffke

Susan Noffke

Associate Professor

I have done historical/conceptual work in social studies as well as some analysis of my own practice as a social studies teacher educator, both of these with a particular eye toward issues of anti-racist education. I have recently completed a number of publications reflecting these broad research interests. A natural outgrowth of both the conceptual and field studies has been on the need for a more adequate framework for curriculum history and curriculum development (including that for teacher education) to reflect the diverse segment of American education.more information...

Margery Osborne

Margery Osborne

Professor

My past research has examined the evolving relationships between teacher, students and subject matter in elementary school classrooms. My current research examines the qualities necessary for the creation and enactment of socially and culturally sensitive science instruction. This involves, in particular, the exploration of the moral and ethical issues raised by such goals and senstivities.more information...

No image available

Ralph Page

Associate Professor

more information...

Yoon Pak

Yoon Pak

Associate Professor

My research focuses on the following topics: - Education of Seattle's Japanese American students on the eve of their incarceration in 1942. - Americanization and Citizenship education in the Seattle Schools, 1916-1942. - Investigating the histories of Asian American education. - Intercultural Education in the Classroom, 1930s-1950s. - History of teaching methods and classroom culture. - Democratic Citizenship Education, Americanization, and acculturation of ethnic minorities and immigrant groups in the U.S. - Comparative approaches to democratic and tolerance education during the Progressive Era. - History of U.S. education in the early twentieth century. - Asian American Education.more information...

Laurence Parker

Laurence Parker

Associate Professor

My past research has focused on educational leadership and diversity, education law and teacher testing, and diversity and evaluation. My current research interests involve looking at critcial race theory and its connection to educational research, policy and practice in the k-12 and postsecondary settings. I am also interested in research dealing with social justice perspectives in educational administration, leadership and policy, particularly with respect to race and social class.more information...

Michelle Perry

Michelle Perry

Professor

My research focuses on children�s learning � especially of mathematics in elementary schools � and the ways in which this can be supported. I attempt to explain how students take up new concepts and contribute to the collective understanding of mathematics in the classroom. My ongoing projects include analysis of video data from first- and fifth-grade classrooms, both in the United States and in China. New students are welcome to join our research group to look at the practices and structures in these lessons that potentially influence student learning.more information...

Michael Peters

Michael Peters

Professor

Michael A Peters is Professor of Education at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Adjunct Professor at RMIT. He is the editor of Educational Philosophy and Theory (Blackwell) and Policy Futures in Education and E-Learning. Recent books include: Showing and Doing: Wittgenstein as a Pedagogical Philosopher (Paradigm, 2008) with Nick Burbules and Paul Smeyers; Global Knowledge Cultures (Sense, 2008) with Cushla Kapitzke; Subjectivity and Truth: Foucault, Education and the Culture of Self (Peter Lang, 2007), Why Foucault? New Directions in Educational Research (Peter Lang, 2007), Building Knowledge Cultures: Educational and Development in the Age of Knowledge Capitalism (Rowman & Littlefield, 2006), all with Tina (A.C.) Besley.more information...

Brian Pianfetti

Brian Pianfetti

Clinical Assistant Professor

more information...

Evangeline Pianfetti

Evangeline Pianfetti

Assistant Dean, Learning Technologies

One of my main research interests is digital video as an instructional tool and as a Web resource. I conduct research on professional development and technology integration, including the increased use of digital video as an instructional tool. I am interested in helping teachers integrate technologies into their curriculum. I currently administer two grants. Unity in Community, funded by Apple Computer, Inc., is a collaborative project between Urbana Middle School and the College of Education at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and uses service learning and computer technology to create a student-centered, project-based curriculum.more information...

Wanda Pillow

Wanda Pillow

Associate Professor

My research interests include the intersections of gender, race, class and sexuality as they impact issues of representation, access, voice, and equality. I explore these issues through thinking and writing about the doing of qualitative research and the methodologies that guide our analyses. I am completing work on a book about the education of school-aged mothers, 1972-2002, that builds from the above interests and further develops my thinking about doing critical, race-based feminist policy analysis.more information...

Adam Poetzel

Adam Poetzel

Clinical Assistant Professor

Adam Poetzel serves as a Clinical Assistant Professor in secondary mathematics education. He joined the C&I faculty in the fall of 2007 after teaching mathematics at Champaign Central High School for ten years. Adam’s instructional focus is on the preparation and training of pre-service mathematics teachers to effectively teach diverse middle and high school students. Currently, he teaches a variety of methods courses for both undergraduate and graduate candidates including courses that examine the role of technology in today’s mathematics classrooms. He maintains strong ties with local schools and is actively involved in several grants focused on the professional development of in-service mathematics teachers.more information...

Adelle Renzaglia

Adelle Renzaglia

Head/Professor

I have recently been involved in developing a teacher preparation program that is collaborative with elementary and secondary education and expanding to art, music and physical education. The program, funded in part by the U.S. Department of Education, provides students in general and special education with collaborative coursework and practicum experiences to facilitate successful inclusion. My program of research related to the preparation of teachers has included investigating the impact of different supervision strategies on the teaching skills of practicum students in teacher preparation programs. More recently, I have conducted research on reflective teaching.more information...

No image available

Deborah Richie

Adjunct Assistant Professor

more information...

David Richman

David Richman

Associate Professor

My teaching and research focuses on assessment and treatment of behavior disorders such as aggression, property destruction, and self-injurious behavior within a Behavior Analytic conceptual model. Current research areas focus on studying the effects of early intervention and prevention treatment packages for birth-to-five children with disabilities exhibiting emerging self-injury. We are attempting to develop behaviorally-based parent training programs to enhance child functional communication and reduce self-injury, chronic stereotypic behavior, and other common early childhood behavior problems such as tantrums.more information...

Fazal Rizvi

Fazal Rizvi

Professor

My research interests focus on the following areas: - Global Studies in Education - Comparative and international education; - Internationalization of Higher education; - Cultural globalization and education policy; - Postcolonial theories of identity, representation and education; - Global inequalities and educational policy; and - International student mobility.   More recently, I have begun working on Indian higher education and the ways in which it is engaging with the challenges of globalization and the knowledge economy.more information...

No image available

Joseph Robinson

Assistant Professor

I am interested in estimating causal and differential effects of education policies and practices, especially as they pertain to reducing achievement gaps. In studying these effects, I often use quasi-experimental methods (e.g., regression discontinuity, propensity score matching), which use observational data but approximate a randomized control trial to provide unbiased effect estimates. I also teach a course on Quasi-experimental Methods (EDPSY 574), which deals with the theories, assumptions, limitations, and implementation issues related to these methods. I am particularly interested in these methods because they can provide an accurate measure of the effectiveness of a policy or practice.more information...

Philip Rodkin

Philip Rodkin

Associate Professor (Child Development Chair)

I study how children at school get along with one another—the friendships and antipathies they form, the norms they promote and defy, the cultures they create—and focus on aggression and conflict, particularly how aggressive children are integrated into peer social life. My scholarship is framed by basic issues in children’s personality and social development and is directed towards critical educational concerns such as school violence reduction, the middle childhood origins of peer sexual harassment, and teacher education about children’s social dynamics.more information...

James Rounds

James Rounds

Professor

Vocational interests and how they change over the life span. Research examines the structure of interests, how that structure develops and changes over the life course, and the reciprocal influences among personality, interests, and abilities with a focus on constructing models. Also, career development in adulthood, assessment of personality traits and work values, and occasionally, a venture into health psychology.more information...

Allison Ryan

Allison Ryan

Associate Professor

Young adolescents' motivation, engagement, and performance in school are important issues. While all individuals do not experience serious problems in school during early adolescence, many do. Disengagement in school at this age has far-reaching consequences for education and career opportunities. The overall goal of my research is to increase our understanding of achievement beliefs and behaviors during this stage of life. A theme throughout my research on achievement during early adolescence is a focus on the intersection of social and academic concerns of young adolescents at school.more information...

Katherine Ryan

Katherine Ryan

Associate Professor (Queries Chair)

My research interests focus on educational evaluation and the intersection of educational accountability issues and high stakes assessment. As educational accountability has become increasingly more important nationally and globally, my work has examined both evaluative capacity building and monitoring issues involved in test-based educational accountability. My current research includes an investigation of the intended and unintended consequences of a state-wide assessment and accountability system in relationship to students, instruction, and educational outcomes.more information...

Rosa Milagros Santos Gilbertz

Rosa Milagros Santos Gilbertz

Associate Professor

For several years I worked as a preschool teacher and as a special education teacher . I am an active member of DEC serving in various leadership roles for the Illinois subdivision and national DEC. I serve on the Editorial Board of the Division for Early Childhood's (DEC) Journal on Early Intervention and currently an Associate Editor for the Young Exceptional Children journal . My research interests include issues that relate to the impact of culture, race and language in the delivery of services to young children with disabilities (birth to five years old) and their families. My current research efforts focus on the examination of parent-child interactions across cultures.more information...

Thomas Schwandt

Thomas Schwandt

Professor and Ed. Psych. Department Chair

My scholarship is primarily focused on the intersection of social research and practical philosophy and is heavily influenced by the tradition of philosophical hermeneutics. In my research I investigate questions concerning the nature of human action, practice, and understanding, as well as the nature and role of expertise and dialogue in developing understanding. In addition, as a student of methodology, I study matters concerning the ethics of research, the nature and status of evidence, and the ways in which evidence is linked to claims.more information...

Carolyn Shields

Carolyn Shields

Professor

Carolyn Shields spent 18 years in K-12 education, including special education, French as a second language, gifted programs, and various leadership positions before completing her doctorate at the University of Saskatchewan and moving to the professorate where she is now a professor of educational leadership. Her research, teaching, and much of her advising are focused on leadership and social justice, with an emphasis on how leaders in North America and elsewhere can promote deeply democratic educational experiences for students through transformative leadership. She has published seven books and numerous articles related to these interests.more information...

James Shriner

James Shriner

Associate Professor

more information...

Jenny Singleton

Jenny Singleton

Associate Professor

My current program of research focuses on deaf children's language development, both American Sign Language and English, including investigation of the ways that deaf teachers support deaf children's identity and language development through visual means.more information...

Linda Sloat

Linda Sloat

Clinical Assistant Professor

Linda Sloat’s primary research interests focus on issues surrounding school improvement in K-12 education, including the administrator’s roles and responsibilities in the change process and leadership for learning at both the building and district level. During her extensive public school administrative career, she also focused on education for the gifted and literacy acquisition.more information...

Christopher Span

Christopher Span

Assistant Professor

I am an assistant professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. I am a historian of education in the department of Educational Policy Studies. My research interests pertain to the educational history of African Americans in the 19th and 20th century.more information...

Lisa Spanierman

Lisa Spanierman

Associate Professor

My research focuses on White individuals’ racial attitudes, their responses to societal racism, and the psychosocial costs of racism to Whites (i.e., negative consequences experienced by Whites as dominant group members in an oppressive system). My colleagues and I developed the Psychosocial Costs of Racism to Whites (PCRW) scale, which measures empathic reactions toward racism, White guilt, and irrational fear of people from other racial groups. Presently, we are deepening our understanding of the relevance of these costs of racism to White students in increasingly diverse environments, and also applying costs of racism theory to White counselors and educators.more information...

Robert Stake

Robert Stake

Professor Emeritus

My past efforts have focused on program evaluation theory and practice, and qualitative research methods including case study. I am currently involved in performance assessment in New York City schools and the evaluation of training in the U.S. Veterans Administration. Since 1975 I have been director of the Center for Instructional Research and Curriculum Evaluation (CIRCE). Once a specialist in psychometrics and instructional research, my present orientation is naturalistic or ethnographic field study, particularly of the classroom. In 1998 I retired from the University of Illinois but continue to teach and head CIRCE.more information...

Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow

Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow

Professor

Cognition shows patterns of both loss and gain through adulthood. While "mental mechanics" (i.e., working memory capacity, computational speed, executive control of attention) may decline, crystallized abilities (i.e., verbal ability, knowledge, acculturation) show continued capacity for growth in many life-span contexts. Our research program has been focused on understanding the implications of these changes in basic capacities for continued learning, how strategic regulation of attention enables compensation, and how habitual engagement in learning engenders cognitive vitality.more information...

Sharon Tettegah

Sharon Tettegah

Assistant Professor

My research focuses on pre-service teacher education and students as it relates to human perception and performance in human-computer intelligent interaction within teaching and learning milieus. I specialize in the study of social simulations and virtual reality environments. I am currently investigating pre-service teachers, and other students in higher education, attitudes and perceptions of student's school interactions involving empathy. My research interests include the use of web based animated narrative vignette technologies (social simulations) as a methodology to understand cognitive and emotional responses of educators and other professionals in helping professions.more information...

Paul Thurston

Paul Thurston

Professor Emeritus

My past research has focused on school design collaborative (Ball Foundation); partnership relationship between College of Education and select schools working in a continuous improvement model; school law topics generally. My current projects include writing personel administration text, working with two school improvement projects, and an edited volume in Advances in Educational Administration series. My new area of research will be to publish the personnel administration book and to continue the refinement of the continuous improvement model.more information...

John Trach

John Trach

Associate Professor

Current research includes the transition of students from school to work and employment for persons with disabilities, the development of support networks to enhance community inclusion, program implementation and evaluation, and inservice and preservice training. Goals for future research projects are to more effectively describe successful postschool outcomes for persons with significant disabilities maximizing entitlement programs (e.g., public school, social security).more information...

Kenneth Travers

Kenneth Travers

Director Emeritus, MSTE

more information...

Tod Treat

Tod Treat

Assistant Professor

My research interests focus on four broad areas: Alliance formation and collaborative forms. Knowledge transfers and boundary spanning, particularly in complex, high technology organizations such as health care, pharmaceutical, life science, renewable energy, and nanotechnology industries. Technology transfer. STEM educational systems and policy toward societal problem-solving. Training and development of scientists and managers to enhance national competitiveness in science and technology. Scientific literacy across the population, recruitment and retention of women and minorities.more information...

William Trent