Profiles
Bryant Best
Specialization: Justice and Diversity in Education
Advisor: Rich Milner
Email: bryant.o.best@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: education policy, education leadership, teacher education
A native of Wilson, North Carolina, Bryant received his B.A. in Psychology and African-American Studies from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and his M.A. in Sociology, specializing in Race, Class, and Gender from the University of Maryland, College Park. Prior to arriving at Vanderbilt, Bryant leveraged research and policy to support education leaders at the American Council on Education and the Council of Chief State School Officers in Washington, DC. While serving at these two national associations, Bryant worked tirelessly to advance justice, diversity, and educational equity for our nation’s most underserved students. At Vanderbilt, Bryant hopes to learn from Dr. Rich Milner and others how to further contribute to a more equitable education system and society through sound education policy, strong education leadership, and high-quality teacher education.
Laura Buckley
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Emily Phillips-Galloway and Jeannette Mancilla-Martinez
Email: laura.e.buckley@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: emergent bilingual learners, early language and literacy development, classroom language environments
Laura developed an interest in the critical role language plays in education while teaching in an immigrant student inclusion classroom in Paris, France. She completed her B.A. in Anthropology, Spanish, French, and Arabic at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, TX, and proceeded to receive her M.Ed. with a specialization in ESL Instruction at SMU as well. Laura taught third grade at a dual language elementary school in Texas. She also received a Fulbright Award which allowed her to return to France and teach English at the high school level. Laura is now Ph.D. student in the Language, Literacy, and Culture Program in the Department of Teaching and Learning. She studies early language and literacy development of young linguistically diverse children. Her current research focuses on opportunities for language learning experienced by emergent bilingual learners in English-dominant classrooms.
Başak Çermikli Ayvaz
Specialization: Language, Literacy and Culture
Advisor: Emily Phillips Galloway
Email: basak.cermikli.ayvaz@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: linguistically and culturally diverse learners, translanguaging, identity
Basak is a doctoral student in the Language, Literacy and Culture track and is focused on emergent bilingual and multilingual learners’ literacy practices in and out of school settings. She has an M.Ed. in Learning and Design from Vanderbilt University, Peabody College. Basak taught English as Second and Foreign language for over 12 years at university programs. She took on several roles ranging from testing specialist, material designer, designer/co-director and instructor in the English Language program geared for government grantees bound for graduate studies abroad. Basak is passionate about emerging biliteracy and translanguaging, and identity navigations in linguistically and culturally diverse classrooms and strives to create equitable learning environments and practices through her research.
Lana Ćosić
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Noel Enyedy
Email: lana.cosic@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: embodied cognition, play, informal learning environments, science and arts education, collaborative learning
Lana Ćosić is a doctoral student in the Department of Teaching and Learning at Vanderbilt University’s Peabody College, working with Dr. Noel Enyedy. She earned her bachelor’s degree in cognitive science and theater at the University of California, Berkeley and her master’s in learning and design from Vanderbilt University. Prior to her time playing with augmented reality environments at Vanderbilt’s HIVE lab, she worked in communications for IBM Data and AI. Her current work explores the intersection of embodied cognition, science learning, and theatre.
Bethany Daniel
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Noel Enyedy
Email: bethany.r.daniel@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: world language and dual language education, race and equity, teacher education
Bethany is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Teaching and Learning. She received a B.A. in French and German and an M.A. in Second Language Teaching from Brigham Young University. She has worked and taught in a variety of K-12, university, and government settings, with an emphasis on designing learning environments to foster language proficiency development. Her research interests lie in understanding how dominant ideologies constrain equitable language learning in different learning environments. Her current work considers how ideologies influence teacher candidate sensemaking in elementary science and dual language immersion contexts.
Zarabeth Davis
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Debbie Rowe
Email: zarabeth.davis@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: emergent writing practices, play, literacy, early childhood, professional learning communities, and project-based learning.
Zarabeth Davis is a fifth-year Ph.D. student in the Language, Literacy and Culture program at Vanderbilt University’s Peabody College. She completed her undergraduate degree at Muhlenberg College and began her teaching career in rural Arkansas. She taught PreK-1st grade for 8 years in both urban and rural low-income communities and served in various leadership capacities including grade level chair and Reading First lab classroom instructor. Prior to beginning the PhD program, Zarabeth supported classrooms in various capacities through curriculum design, teacher coaching, and professional development primarily in the Memphis community. Her interests are in high-quality PreK practices and ensuring our youngest learners get to engage in big thinking. Zarabeth is currently working with Debbie Rowe on the Early Literacy Partnership to support emergent writing practices within MNPS PreK classrooms.
Efrat Dim
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Corey Brady
Email: efrat.dim@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: math education, technology based learning
Laura Fittz
Specialization: Justice and Diversity in Education
Advisor: Rich Milner
Email: laura.l.fittz@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: student leadership, restorative practices, youth participatory action research
Laura Fittz (she/her) is a fourth-year doctoral student in the Department of Teaching and Learning. After earning her B.A. from Wheaton College (IL), she taught English Literature for seven years at Glencliff High School in Nashville, Tennessee. While teaching, she earned her M.Ed. in the Learning, Diversity, and Urban Studies program at Peabody and began coordinating Restorative Practices at GHS. In 2016, she started the Peace Team, a Restorative Student Leaders team whose model has spread through the district, region, and even nationally and internationally. She is interested in how the mindset and practices of working with students (rather than to them or for them) can bring about transformational change in schools and teacher preparation programs.
Abbey Gonzales
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Amanda Goodwin
Email: abbey.e.gonzales@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: high school ELL instruction, teacher training
Abbey Gonzales is originally from Sugar Land, Texas. She attended the University of Texas at Austin and taught both rural China and the United States. She took a brief hiatus from education and worked as a data specialist for Global Whole Foods Market. Prior to Vanderbilt, Abbey was a high school assistant principal in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where she developed a passion for ELL instruction and teacher training.
Michael Havazelet
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Amanda Goodwin and Kevin Leander
Email: michael.s.havazelet@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: classroom discourse, student dialogue, project based learning, elementary literacy education, intersections between learning, identity, and affect
Micaela Y. Harris
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Nicole M. Joseph
Email: micaela.y.harris@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: Black women math teachers, identity, recruitment and retention
Micaela Y. Harris is a fifth-year Ph.D. student in the Mathematics and Science Education specialization in the Learning, Teaching and Diversity program at Vanderbilt University. She received her B.A. in Sociology with a minor in Mathematics from Spelman College, her post-baccalaureate certificate in Mathematics from Smith College, and her MAT in Math Education from Tufts University. Prior to her doctoral studies at Vanderbilt, Micaela leveraged her interdisciplinary background to teach secondary mathematics in Boston, MA and Houston, TX. At Peabody, Micaela centers her research on the intersectional experiences of Black women mathematics teachers and Black women undergraduates majoring in STEM.
Tessaly Jen
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Dr. Noel Enyedy
Email: tessaly.t.jen@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: elementary science and environmental education, curriculum design, equity, technology-enhanced learning, place-based learning, socioecological care
Madison Knowe
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Melissa Gresalfi
Email: madison.l.knowe@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: mathematical play and design of mathematics learning environments
Madison, a native of Lexington, Kentucky, received her Bachelor of Science degrees in Pure Mathematics and Chemistry in 2011 from the College of Charleston and her Masters in Secondary Mathematics Education in 2014 from Vanderbilt University. She has been a classroom math teacher for 7 years at international, public, and private secondary institutions. During this time learning math with students, she became interested in incorporating play as a platform for equitable mathematical inquiry in her classroom, and therefore is now currently working with Melissa Gresalfi on Mathematical play and learning environment design.
Sarah Lee
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Noel Enyedy
Email: sarah.lee@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: STEM education, out of school time (OST) learning, early and middle childhood, multilingual learners
Before Vanderbilt, Sarah was the Research and Advisory Associate at a children’s museum in the San Francisco Bay Area. She contributed to publications on STEM, the benefits of play, and technology in early childhood. She also worked on state and national grant funded projects, such as developing resources for librarians based on school readiness research. Sarah also served on the board of directors for Next Generation Scholars, a non-profit college access program for low-income students of color. After earning her B.A. in Linguistics from the University of Pennsylvania, Sarah is now excited to return to academia and combine her passions for language, education, and equity.
Fanjie Li
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Alyssa Friend Wise
Email: fanjie.li@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: learning technologies, learning analytics, human-centered design
Website: https://fanjie-li.netlify.app/
Fanjie Li is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Teaching and Learning and a doctoral researcher at Vanderbilt’s LIVE Initiative. Her work resides at the intersection of educational data science and human-centered informatics. With a focus on the human-centered design and implementation of learning analytics systems, her current research ranges from data storytelling in instructor-facing dashboards, automated feedback that supports reflective practices in dental education, to learning analytics that affords more equitable and inclusive learning experiences.
Candice Love
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Melissa Gresalfi
Email: candice.love@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: math play, computational thinking, informal learning, STEM identities
Candice Love is a fourth-year doctoral student in the Department of Teaching and Learning. After earning a B.A. and M.A. in education, Candice taught in an elementary school in Oakland, CA. Currently, Candice’s research interests are playful mathematics in Black communities, and better understanding how math shows up in the games that Black people play.
Taylor McNeill
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Luis Leyva
Email: reagin.t.mcneill@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: postsecondary math faculty engagement in equity-oriented instructional and departmental change
Taylor McNeill is a doctoral student in mathematics education at Vanderbilt University and a member of the PRISM research lab. They previously received a Ph.D. in mathematics and worked as a mathematics professor, experiences that motivate their work to recreate postsecondary mathematics as a humanizing and affirming space for mathematicians from historically marginalized groups, both students and faculty. Taylor’s research focuses on mathematics faculty, exploring both inequity in faculty experiences and how faculty can advance equity for their students through instruction and departmental practices. They have a particular interest in how mathematics epistemological values can uphold or disrupt social inequity in postsecondary mathematics contexts, and go beyond relational dynamics and broader social forces to interrogate mathematics content and practice.
Lizi Metts
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Ilana Horn
Email: elizabeth.c.metts@vanderbilt.edu
Research interests: math education, teacher learning, statistics and data learning, equity and justice
Lizi Metts is a Ph.D. student at Vanderbilt University Peabody College and a research assistant on Project TAU. Her research interests broadly revolve around mathematics education, data and statistics literacy, issues of equity and social justice, and teacher learning. Prior to graduate school, she was a high school math teacher in Tennessee for eight years. Returning to graduate studies at Vanderbilt, she is interested in exploring teacher learning around ambitious and equitable pedagogies and the teaching and learning of statistics, modeling, and data science drawing on socio-cultural, situative, and critical perspectives.
Nicollette D. Mitchell
Specialization: Justice and Diversity in Education
Advisor: Luis Leyva
Email: nicollette.d.mitchell@vanderbilt.edu
Research interests: equity in STEM higher education
Jackson Reimers
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Corey Brady
Email: jackson.e.reimers@vanderbilt.edu
Research interests: modeling, collective and embodied learning, intersection of science, art, and craft
Jackson is a doctoral student in the Department of Teaching and Learning at Vanderbilt University’s Peabody College, focusing on Learning and Design. He is advised by Corey Brady and is a member of Brady’s CROWD Lab. Jackson originally came to Vanderbilt from his native Southern California to study engineering and education at Vanderbilt as an undergraduate, after which he taught physics and engineering at a public high school in suburban Tennessee for three years. His design research focuses on multimodal modeling environments for enhancing collaborative, equitable, and playful learning.
Amanda Yoshiko Shimizu
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Debbie Rowe
Email: amanda.y.shimizu@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: digital literacy, collaboration, multimodality, writing
Website: https://amandashimizu.com/
Prior to arriving at Vanderbilt, Amanda Shimizu was a teacher for 10 years, including international teaching with the Peace Corps in the Republic of Moldova, first grade on a U.S. military base in South Korea, and a founding literacy teacher across grades two, three, and four at charter schools in Rhode Island. Her work focuses on elementary students’ literacy practices in digital environments. In her dissertation research, she investigates the collaborative and multimodal writing practices of culturally and linguistically diverse elementary students in online spaces with digital tools. Through the development of innovative multimodal methodologies, she explores how third graders’ collaborative writing develops across multiple online spaces, authors, and modes of interaction. The digital nature of this work provides space to develop new methodologies to study students’ interactions. In turn, it also has the potential to theoretically expand what counts as writing participation as well as a place to pedagogically support practitioners hoping to incorporate collaboration, multimodality, and digital writing tools into their classroom instruction.
Rachel Siegman
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture Advisor: Dr. Emily Phillips Galloway Email: Rachel.M.Siegman@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: English language learners, culturally responsive and sustaining pedagogy, equitable teaching practices, multicultural education, learning sciences, international and comparative education
Website: https://rachelsiegman.weebly.com
Rachel Siegman is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Teaching, Learning, and Diversity at Vanderbilt University. As a K-12 certified teacher, holding multiple and single subject credentials (in English) and an EL authorization, Rachel has taught at the PreK-12 grade levels including elementary school in inner city Los Angeles, CA, high school English in Oakland, CA, and World History/Honors United States History in Richmond, CA. She obtained her credentials, Spanish concentration and Liberal Arts Education Bachelor’s degree from Pepperdine University in California. Rachel’s MSc. in Comparative and International Education is from The University of Oxford, with a research focus on the public opinion of Syrian refugees and its role in public policy, opinion, and political action among European nations. Prior to joining Vanderbilt, Rachel established a high school Internship Program and Model United Nations team as well as taught English, International Studies, and Design Lab at Design Tech High School located on Oracle’s campus in the California Bay Area. As a former resident of Argentina and England, with teaching and school-community partnership experience in public and public charter schools, Rachel values context and the multiple stakeholders involved in successful learning experiences, especially for culturally and linguistically diverse learners.
Karen Underwood
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Ilana Horn
Email: karen.underwood@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: math education, teacher learning
Jamie Vescio
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Melissa Gresalfi
Email: jamie.l.vescio@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: elementary mathematics education, playful learning, arts-integration
Jamie is a doctoral student in the Department of Teaching and Learning, specializing in Learning and Design. A native of Lexington, Kentucky, she received her B.A. in Anthropology and French from Transylvania University and her M.Ed. in Elementary Education from Vanderbilt University. She has taught in a variety of settings, including middle school French at a creative and performing arts school, kindergarten mathematics within a dual-language French immersion classroom, and high school English through the Fulbright Program in France. As both a former student and eventual educator within arts-integrated K-12 spaces, Jamie explores the role of creativity and play-based learning in expanding opportunities for participation, learning, and joy within primary mathematics classrooms.
Fai Wisittanawat
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Melissa Gresalfi
Email: panchompoo.wisittanawat@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: students’ meaningful participation in STEM practices
Panchompoo (Fai) Wisittanawat is a doctoral student in the Department of Teaching and Learning at Vanderbilt University. She has a B.A. in Physics and Educational Studies from Swarthmore College, PA. Fai is interested in understanding disciplinary practices of mathematics and science and designing classroom environments that support students’ engagement with those practices in ways that are meaningful to them. Fai plays traditional Thai and Balinese music, and has helped teach children to play those musics in and out of school.
Liwei Zhang
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Heidi Carlone
Email: liwei.zhang@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: STEM education, teacher development
Liwei Zhang is a PhD student in the Department of Teaching and Learning at Vanderbilt’s Peabody College. She received a BS in Industrial Engineering and MS with a concentration on Engineering and Technology Teacher Education from Purdue University. Liwei has worked and taught at elementary and high schools in China before coming to Vanderbilt. She is interested in exploring approaches to provide students with high-quality science education through supporting science teachers.
Chengcheng Zhou
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: David Dickinson and Emily Phillips-Galloway
Email: chengcheng.zhou@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: early language development, multilingual learners
Chengcheng received her BA in English and two MAs in Intercultural Communicaiton and TESOL, respectively. She has taught Chinese as an instructor and ESL in a variety of K-12 classrooms in the US and abroad. She is interested in early childhood langauge development and its relationship with the “school readiness gap” between children from different SES.
Hannah Hayeon Ziegler
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Heidi Carlone
Email: hannah.h.ziegler@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: STEM identity and retention, scientific epistemologies, secondary and post-secondary STEM education
Originally from South Korea, Hannah is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Teaching and Learning at Vanderbilt University. Following her undergraduate studies at Pepperdine University, Hannah obtained a Master’s in Science Education from Teachers College, Columbia University. She also spent four years as a high school science and math teacher in southern Idaho. Hannah has prior experience researching the impact of volcanic eruptions on global climate at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies. More recently, she has collaborated with the Idaho Drone League to research applications of hands-on, drone-based learning in K-12. Some of her other research interests involve: teachers’ technological pedagogical content knowledge (TPACK), the retention of secondary and post-secondary science learners, as well as equitable STEM teaching practices.
Former Students
Amanda M. Bell
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Melissa Gresalfi
Email: amanda.m.bell@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: computational thinking, computer science and mathematics education, in and out-of-school learning contexts, design
Portia Botchway
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Rich Lehrer and Ebony McGee
Email: portia.k.botchway@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: elementary and secondary mathematics and science
Sarah Burriss
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Kevin Leander
Email: sarah.burriss@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: learning of artificial intelligence & ethics, in and out of school learning, digital literacies, young adult and children’s literature
Sarah hails from Charleston, SC, where she was a public librarian before coming to Nashville. She graduated with a B.A. in Psychology from Yale University and has a Master’s in Library and Information Science from University of South Carolina. Sarah is interested in learning that happens inside and outside of school–including in libraries–and how adolescents navigate the increasingly complex world of digital and networked information.
Laura Carter-Stone
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Kevin Leander
Email: laura.j.carter-stone@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: culturally-sustaining pedagogy, ELL education, performing arts
Laura developed a commitment to culturally-sustaining instruction while teaching kindergarteners on the Pine Ridge Reservation. As a high school Spanish and Response-to-Intervention English teacher in her home state of Kentucky, she incorporated dramatic play, digital media, music, and storytelling into her language and literacy learning classroom. She recently earned her M.S. in Social and Philosophical Issues in Education from the University of Kentucky. Laura currently explores how the arts might create more engaging and equitable learning environments for culturally and linguistically diverse adolescents.
Kate Chapman
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Melissa Gresalfi
Email: katherine.c.chapman@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: STEM learning from a socio-cultural/learning ecology perspective, equity issues in designing for out-of-school spaces, ntegration between in-school and out-of-school learning opportunities.
Kate Chapman is from Seattle, Washington. She holds a B.A. in Russian from Reed College, and an M.Ed. from Vanderbilt. As an academic tutor and later a field trip facilitator, she became interested in working to build better bridges between formal and informal learning environments. Her dissertation focuses on practices around STEM learning in informal spaces, as well as how different sociotechnical configurations can index and reanimate remote spaces, creating potential for negotiation of meaning and identity. With NSF support she has recently been working in curriculum development for informal spaces looking at both traditional STEM concepts and new ideas around place and mobility.
Nadav Ehrenfeld
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Ilana Horn
Email: nadav.ehrenfeld@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: math education, culture and learning, classroom discourse, teacher learning
Nadav is a previous research assistant on project SIGMa (Supporting Instructional Growth in Mathematics) and a teaching assistant for Introduction to Mathematical Literacies. He studies what it means to support mid-career teachers in providing students with rich math learning experiences. Nadav taught math in pre-college and college programs, and facilitated teacher PD in southern Israel. He holds a BSc in Mathematics & Computer Science and an MSc in Mathematics (with focus on math education) from Ben Gurion University.
Caitlin Eley
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Robert Jimenez
Email: caitlin.eley@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: second language learning, culturally relevant pedagogy, borderland communities, cultural literacy practices, and multimodal literacies
Amy Voss Farris
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Pratim Sengupta & Rich Lehrer
Email: amy.farris@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: children’s development of representational fluency in math, science, and computing in and out of school settings; children’s aesthetic sensibilities with disciplinary knowledge and practices.
Brette Garner
Specialization: Math & Science Education
Advisor: Ilana Horn
Email: brette.garner@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: mathematics education, teacher learning, data use, equity
Elizabeth Hadley
Specialization: Development, Learning, & Diversity
Advisor: David Dickinson
Email: elizabeth.b.hadley@Vanderbilt.Edu
Research interests: language and literacy development in early childhood, emergent literacy, the contribution of early oral language skills to reading comprehension, vocabulary interventions, book-reading and play in early childhood classrooms, depth of vocabulary knowledge & assessment
Mariah Harmon
Advisor: Ilana Horn
Email: mariah.harmon@vanderbilt.edu
Research interests: teacher learning as it pertains to inclusive instruction for diverse students.
Mariah Harmon is originally from Decatur, Georgia and earned her undergraduate degree from Vanderbilt University (College of Arts and Science), and her Master’s in Education: Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Mississippi. Mariah started her career in education in Okolona, Mississippi as a middle school English/Language Arts Teacher. Most recently, she has served as an instructional coach in Indianapolis Public Schools. Her research interests are in teacher learning and understanding how teachers build inclusive and equitable classrooms.
Kaitlin Herbert
Specialization: Learning, Literacy, and Culture
Advisors: David Dickinson and Deborah Rowe
Email: kaitlin.herbert@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: early childhood, language development, teacher sensemaking, teacher learning
Kaitlin’s research focuses on examining the quality of the classroom language practices in early childhood classrooms. Most recently, Kaitlin’s work has explored teachers’ sensemaking practices around language learning in the classroom. Her work seeks to influence the creation of professional learning experiences and ECE curriculum that are more aligned with teachers’ existing sensemaking practices.
Amy B. Holmes
Specialization: Development, Learning, and Diversity
Advisor: Rich Lehrer
Email: amy.b.holmes@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: design-based research, diversity and equity in STEM education, teacher education
Lara Jasien
Specialization: Math & Science Education
Advisor: Ilana Horn
Email: lara.l.heiberger@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: informal and formal in-service teacher learning, inquiry and play-based pedagogies, teacher collaboration, designing for shared social/material/intellectual resources
Sara Jones
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Amanda Goodwin
Email: sara.jones@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: experiences of historically marginalized students in middle school literacy classrooms; reading motivation as a collective, critical endeavor
Sara Jones is from Simsbury, CT. She earned her B.A. in Elementary Education from Elon University and her M.Ed. in Urban and Minority Education from the University of Maryland. Sara taught for eight years in Washington, D.C. During the course of those years, she taught 4th, 5th, and 6th grades, but fell in love with and became passionate about 5th grade ELA. She served as the ELA department chair and grade level team lead for numerous years, which allowed her to gain experience in curriculum design, teacher training and leadership, and data analysis. Sara hopes to focus her work on practical, applicable strategies for classroom teachers. She is currently pursuing a mixed-methods research agenda focused on reading motivation as a collective, critical endeavor grounded in Literacy as a means of social justice
Jennifer Kahn
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Rogers Hall
Email: jennifer.kahn@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: design-based research; interaction analysis; interdisplinary learning environments; counternarratives; data science; critical literacy, storytelling, and modeling with public large-scale datasets
Nicolas Kochmanski
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Paul Cobb
Email: nicholas.m.kochmanski@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: mathematics instruction, teacher learning, teacher development, instructional coaching, teacher education
CV: Resume-Nicholas-Kochmanski_PhD1
Tess Lantos
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Amanda Goodwin
Email: terese.a.lantos@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: teacher learning, reading comprehension, literacy
Jessica Lawson
Specialization: Development, Learning, and Diversity
Advisor: David Dickinson
Email: jessica.r.lawson@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: language, literacy, music
Samantha Marshall
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Ilana Horn
Email: samantha.marshall@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: mathematics teacher learning, justice, professional development
Alexis McBride
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Robert Jiménez
Email: alexis.mcbride@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: post-secondary English language learners and Spanish heritage language learners, multilingual education strategies, and basic writing instruction
Janna McClain
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Jeannette Mancilla-Martinez
Email: janna.mcclain@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: teachers as learners, language minoritized learners, language ideologies, language demands of classrooms
Heather Meston
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Emily Phillips Galloway
Email: heather.meston@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: student agency, teacher learning, dialogic pedagogies
Heather developed a commitment to agency-supportive dialogic instruction while teaching middle school English and social studies. In her classroom, she emphasized centering students’ voices and commitments in deepening learning and creating opportunities for students to act as change agents. She received her B.S. in Psychology from Yale University and her M.Ed. in Elementary Education from Vanderbilt University. Her current research interests revolve around teacher learning about agency-supportive instruction and dialogic pedagogies.
Mary Miller
Specialization: Language, Literacy, & Culture
Advisor: Debbie Rowe
Email: mary.e.miller@Vanderbilt.Edu
Research Interests: bilingual literacy development, translanguaging, digital literacies, multilingual family engagement in schools, early childhood/elementary school literacy education, teacher education
Sascha Mowrey
Specialization: Development, Learning, and Diversity
Advisor: Dale Farran
Email: sascha.mowrey@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: teacher and school leader development, school organization and professional culture, teaching assistants in early childhood education
Min Oh
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Jeannette Mancilla-Martinez
Email: min.hyun.oh@vanderbilt.edu
Research interests: language and literacy development, linguistically diverse learners
Min holds an Ed.M. in Language and Literacy from the Harvard Graduate School of Education and a B.A. from Mercer University as a Stamps Family Charitable Foundation Scholar. As a former English learner in the U.S. school system, Min is interested in supporting linguistically diverse learners’ language and literacy development and exploring various components that contribute to the process. She works with Drs. Jeannette Mancilla-Martinez and Emily Phillips-Galloway, to further engage in language and literacy development research focused on linguistically diverse learners. Currently, Min’s work focuses on: (1) exploring the link between teachers’ beliefs about dual language development and English language and literacy outcomes and (2) investigating equitable assessment approaches to distinguishing language differences and language disabilities among English learners.
Alvin Pearman
Specialization: Development, Learning, & Diversity
Advisor: Dale Farran
Email: a.pearman@Vanderbilt.Edu
Ashlyn Pierson
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Doug Clark and Corey Brady
Email: ashlyn.pierson@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: modeling, translanguaging
Laura Piestrzynski
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Debbie Rowe
Email: laura.e.piestrzynski@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: emergent literacy, language and literacy development in early childhood, teacher education
Emma D. V. Reimers
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Rogers Hall
Email: emmadvreimers@gmail.com
Research Interests: digital literacy, place-based learning, ‘in the wild’ learning, design-based research, music as storytelling
Website: emmavendetta.com/research
Emma Reimers’ work stretches across the fields of learning sciences and critical media studies, finding a balanced blend in her research on sound and the social construction of listening. She also studies spatial learning and narrative in the context of public space, combining methods that draw together storytelling and digital representation. Emma has worked in the nonprofit sector as a grant writer, communications director, and business consultant. Additionally, she is a writer, musician, and graphic designer. Emma holds a bachelor’s degree in English Creative Writing and Space and the Human Condition from Vanderbilt.
Dan Reynolds
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Amanda Goodwin
Email: dan.reynolds@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: text complexity, scaffolding of reading instruction, literature in the classroom, English teacher preparation
David Sabey
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Kevin Leander
Email: david.b.sabey@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: identity, literacy, new media, mobility, connected learning, learning across contexts
Katherine Schneeberger McGugan
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Ilana Horn
Email: katherine.e.schneeberger@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: culturally relevant curriculum design, impactful models for professional development
Katherine started exploring the intersection of curriculum design and professional development as a middle school Math Coach in the Boston area. Prior to her role as a coach, she received her M.A.T. from Boston University before becoming a 7th grade math intervention teacher. She is currently a research assistant for Dr. Ilana Horn’s Project SIGMa. Her research interests include how to create sustainable curricula in STEM fields that address issues of inequity in gender, race, and socio-economic status, and models for professional development that combat teacher retention and student achievement problems in high-needs districts.
Elizabeth Self
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Ilana S. Horn
Email: elizabeth.self@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: clinical simulations, cultural diversity, teacher education, design-based research
Natalie Rae
Specialization: Math and Science Education
Advisor: Jessica Watkins
Current Position: Assistant Professor of Learning, Design, and Technology
Research Interests: Critical STEM Education, Black feminist thought, Engineering Learning
Ben Rydal Shapiro
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Rogers Hall
Research Interests: learning sciences, information visualization, architecture, human-computer interaction
Grant Van Eaton
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisor: Doug Clark
Email: grant.vaneaton@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: teacher learning and professional development, international education, culturally responsive teaching, designing and validating formative measures of teacher growth
Lauren Vogelstein
Specialization: Learning and Design
Advisors: Rogers Hall and Corey Brady
Email: lauren.e.vogelstein@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: learning sciences, embodiment, choreography, STEM, ethnography, design based research, interaction analysis, relational aspects of collective learning
Website: laurenvogelstein.com
CV: Lauren Vogelstein CV
I investigate how embodied theories of learning, informed by the expressive and artistic practices of dancers and choreographers, can reframe what is learned in STEM environments; how it can be learned; who can participate; and to what ends. I pair ethnography with design-based research to support and study embodied and collaborative STEM learning. With deep roots in both dance and mathematics, I have always conceptualized the tools and ideas of these disciplines as mutually supportive, not conflicting. In my research, I design and study hybrid learning environments integrating dance and STEM. I explore how such hybridity can invite learners to draw upon resources typically left out of STEM contexts, contributing to their depth of engagement and understanding.
Holland White
Specialization: Language, Literacy, and Culture
Advisor: Robert Jimenez
Email: holland.l.white@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: literacy practices of multilingual students, student-centered writing practices in secondary schools, translingual writing
Holland began her teaching career in the world of freshman composition and community college tutoring, which led her to pursue a deeper understanding of the pedagogies surrounding literacy practices. After completing an M.Ed. in Language and Literacy in the Urban Teach program at the University of Texas at Austin, she taught 9th, 10th, and 11th grade ELA at a Title I school in Austin, Texas, utilizing writing and reading workshop practices. She is interested in the linguistic resources that multilingual students bring to literacy practices, how student-centered approaches to writing support multilingual students’ identities in and out of the classroom, and how multilingual students engage in translingual writing.
Megan Wongkamalasai
Specialization: Math & Science Education
Advisor: Rich Lehrer
Email: megan.j.wongkamalasai@vanderbilt.edu
Research Interests: early childhood mathematics education