International Literacy Association (Professor emeritus Donald Leu is quoted)
International Literacy Association (Professor emeritus Donald Leu is quoted)
CT Post (Batouly Camara, Neag School alumna and former member of the UConn women’s basketball team, is profiled)
Zip06 (Alum Matthew Talmadge featured)
Editor’s Note: The following story originally appeared on UConn Today, the University of Connecticut’s news website.
Two new grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF), totaling just shy of $1 million, have been awarded to Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE) faculty Alexandra Hain and Arash Zaghi for work they will carry out in undergraduate research opportunities and new programs for graduate students in the neurodiversity spectrum. The grants focus on the talents of students with ADHD and dyslexia in STEM fields.
The first grant, funded by the NSF Innovations in Graduate Education program, encourages the participation of neurodiverse students in STEM graduate programs to significantly benefit the creativity of our professional workforce, which in turn will help to identify groundbreaking solutions to the large-scale and complex scientific and technological challenges facing the nation. It will provide several resources, workshops, and tools to neurodiverse graduate students to improve their success in graduate programs and give them skills that prepare them for careers in academia and business. Through the help of Zaghi, Hain, Civil Engineering Professor Richard Christenson, Educational Psychology Professor Joseph Madaus, English Professor Tom Deans, and Literacy Education Professor Rachael Gabriel, the team will be developing a strength profiler tool, creating a peer mentoring program, piloting a technical writing program, and holding stakeholder workshops. This project enjoys the strong support of the dean of the Graduate School, Vice Provost Kent Holsinger, to ensure that its impact goes beyond STEM programs.
The second grant, which is aimed at undergraduate research for students who are neurodiverse, will re-launch and expand on a previous NSF Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) that UConn ran for neurodiverse students from 2015-2018. The new 10-week summer program will build on the learnings from the previous program and will recruit juniors and seniors from across the country, to participate in specially designed research projects in the fields of artificial intelligence for storm damage prediction, machine learning for damage assessment of bridges, and several other topics.
The students will present on their projects at the end of the summer and will participate in special seminars, brainstorming sessions, mentorship opportunities, and workshops designed to address the needs and challenges of the neurodiverse participants. Other faculty participating in that program include CEE faculty members Tim Vadas, Jin Zhu, Shinae Jang, Christine Kirchhoff, Emmanouil Anagnostou, and Diego Cerrai.
UConn Today (Neag School’s Joseph Madaus and Rachael Gabriel are mentioned regarding a new NSF grant they will be supporting)
Editor’s Note: The following story originally appeared on UConn Today, the University of Connecticut’s news website.
Six UConn students have been selected as recipients of a grant through the Fulbright U.S. Student Program for the 2021-22 academic year. The program provides grants for individually-designed study and research projects or for English teaching assistantships around the world. Students meet, work, live with, and learn from the people of the host country, sharing daily experiences.
UConn had an all-time high of 17 semifinalists for the Fulbright Student Program award, which includes the six finalists and three alternates. A total of 40 UConn students completed UConn’s campus application process for the 2021-22 Fulbright round.
“In what has been a truly challenging year for all students, and one which witnessed an 11.9% increase overall in applications to the Fulbright Student program, our UConn applicants demonstrated outstanding qualities and their commitment to fostering mutual understanding by engaging with the world,” says LuAnn Saunders-Kanabay, assistant director in the Office of National Scholarships and Fellowships at UConn and the Fulbright Program Advisor. Together with the campus Fulbright committee, she mentors Fulbright applicants through the months-long process.
The six UConn students who are recipients (also referred to as “finalists”) are:
Elizabeth Clifton, a doctoral student in ecology and evolutionary biology, will explore the vast diversity of weapon adaptations in termites in collaboration with the Faculty of Tropical AgriSciences at the Czech University of Life Sciences in Prague. An avid outdoors person, she plans to hike, learn the local flora and fauna, and connect with the citizens of Czechia. Upon her return to the United States, Clifton will defend her dissertation and apply to post-doctoral positions that will enable her to travel internationally for fieldwork and continue scientific collaborations.
Karli Golembeski, a master’s student in curriculum and instruction in the Neag School of Education and a native of New Milford, will travel to Spain for an English teaching assistant grant. Golembeski aspires to a future as a Spanish language educator with the goal of fostering the prioritization of foreign language study in American schools. Her experience as an English teaching assistant in the Galicia region will provide an immersive experience outside of metropolitan areas, enabling her to engage with cultural traditions in smaller communities and represent American culture in Spanish classrooms.
Chloe Murphy ’21 (CLAS), was an Africana Studies major from New London, with an abiding interest in Lusophone society and the African diaspora. She will travel to Brazil for an English teaching assistant grant and seeks to teach English and experience a part of the world which has a comparable yet contrasting history to the United States. Murphy looks forward to learning the history and exploring the architecture of the community while sharing her American perspective. When she returns to the United States, Murphy will pursue a master’s in education, to teach history at the high school level in an urban setting, and eventually move into administration.
Simran Sehgal ’21 (ENG) was a biomedical engineering major with an interest in the forces of culture, economics and politics that shape the dynamics of our technological environment and received a Fulbright Study grant to the Netherlands. She has been accepted at Maastricht University to pursue a master’s in European studies on society, science, and technology, where she will focus on science and public policy to examine the relationship between contemporary governance and technological innovations. Upon completion of her master’s, Sehgal will return to attend medical school with a dual master’s program in health services and policy research.
Jessica Stargardter ’16 (ED) ’17 MA, received her master’s in curriculum and instruction and will travel to Finland for a Fulbright Research grant. A native of Windsor, she earned a certificate in Gifted Education and Talent Development in 2019 and has been working as a gifted and talented teacher for the Norwalk Public Schools since 2018. In collaboration with faculty at the University of Helsinki, her research project will examine how teachers in Finnish schools provide services to gifted immigrant students. Upon completion of her research, Stargardter will share the results with practitioners in Finland and the U.S. through conferences, professional development, and publications.
Candace Tang ’21 (CLAS) was a double major in sociology and human development and family studies with an interest in the creative arts and will travel to Taiwan for the ETA grant. A native of Simsbury, Tang seeks to develop a new strategy of language-learning as an English Teaching Assistant in Taiwan by engaging with local artists and story-telling projects. Upon her return, Tang will pursue a master’s program in social work with a focus on serving international students in higher education.
UConn students named alternates for a Fulbright grant were:
Amir Agoora ’21 (CLAS), an English major; Olasubomi (Mini) Ajayi ‘21 (CAHNR), an allied health major; and Jonathan Simmons, a doctoral student in the curriculum and instruction in the Neag School of Education.
UConn students named semifinalists for a Fulbright grant were:
Jessica Adams ‘20 (CLAS), a biology major; Jolene Addi ’21 (CLAS), a psychological sciences major; Mia Flynn ’21 (CLAS), an economics major; Brendan Hogan ‘21 (CLAS), with majors in political science, philosophy and psychological sciences; Brianna McClure ‘19 (CLAS), a political science major; Shankara Narayanan ‘21 (CLAS), a history and political science major; Magdalena Pawlowski, a master’s in fine arts student in painting; Isaiah Williams ‘17 (ENG), an environmental engineering major.
Operating in over 140 countries worldwide, the Fulbright Program is the flagship international educational exchange program sponsored by the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) and is designed to increase mutual understanding between the people of the United States and the people of other countries.
The Office of National Scholarships & Fellowships (ONSF) is a resource for students interested in learning more about the Fulbright U.S. Student Program and other prestigious externally-funded scholarships and fellowships that support both graduate and undergraduate study. ONSF is part of Enrichment Programs and is open to all graduate and undergraduate students at the University, including students at the regional campuses. For more information about Fulbright specifically, contact LuAnn Saunders-Kanabay, UConn’s Fulbright Program Advisor.
UConn Today (A Neag School grad and current student are among the recipients)
Neag School of Education students completing the UConn Administrator Preparation Program (UCAPP) this spring recently presented their capstone projects – the program’s signature final assignment in which students identify a need or opportunity for school improvement and work toward positive change.
During the seventh annual Change Project Day, held virtually last month, UCAPP students had the opportunity “to synthesize and translate to practice everything they’ve learned in the coursework and observed or practiced during the clinical practicum,” says Richard Gonzales, associate professor-in-residence and director of the Neag School’s Educational Leadership Preparation Programs. “It is a structured opportunity to test knowledge and theory in the real world,” he adds.
The UCAPP program went through a redesign in 2020 as part of a nationwide effort known as the University Principal Preparation Initiative (UPPI), funded by the Wallace Foundation. As a result of the redesign, the concept of family and parent engagement became a priority for the first organizational leadership course in UCAPP’s program of study.
Gonzales notes the importance of connecting with parents, pointing out that “effective school leaders proactively seek to work with parents as partners to support student learning.”
Three of the students’ capstone projects focused on parent engagement and were carried out with support from the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving.
“You can create a culture that makes everyone – including families and community partners – feel like they are essential to the fabric of the school community — because they are,” Shuana Tucker, chief talent officer with the Connecticut State Department of Education (CSDE) and former UCAPP adjunct professor told UCAPP grads in her Change Project Day address.
One capstone project, designed and implemented by UCAPP student Kenterra Carrion, a school social worker for Hartford (Conn.) Public Schools, focused on “building trust, open communication, and positive relationships as a school community.”
The project, titled “Parent University Night,” was hosted by Pathways Academy of Technology and Design, located in East Hartford, Connecticut, to help parents navigate technology and applications their children use during remote learning, while offering support during this unprecedented time as students progress through high school.
The Parent University Night included five sessions, taught by teachers and one parent, on such topics as the effects of COVID-19 on the whole child; suicide prevention; personal wellness; college and career readiness; and social media.
Carrion says she sees parents as an “essential part of building a positive school community, as they are active participants in the learning and development of the whole student inside and outside of school.”
“When parents lead initiatives, communicating with one another about student opportunities and engaging in meaningful conversations with stakeholders, students gain a network of support, encouragement, and inspiration,” she adds.
Carrion wanted her project to represent a commitment to their schools’ students and their “village.”
“As part of the desired outcome of the project, the parents will have an opportunity to build reciprocal relationships, to develop trust and open communication,” she says.
Staff and parents plan to build upon this initiative by hosting another Parent Engagement Night next school year.
Nicole Selmanie, an eighth-grade mathematics educator for Burr Middle School in Hartford, led her school’s Family, School, and Community Engagement Committee (FCSE) this past year.
“Parents want the best for their children. We believe they are always willing to support their child’s learning, and thus are the best partners,” says Selmanie. “Research has shown that family involvement in a child’s education matters. It’s essential for our students to reach their full potential that teachers and families are on the same page.”
“Research has shown that family involvement in a child’s education matters. It’s essential for our students to reach their full potential that teachers and families are on the same page.”
— Nicole Selmanie ’12 MSW, ’21 6th Year
Through her leadership as a UCAPP student, the FSCE had been analyzing data on school climate and family input, which led the committee to focus partnering with families to improve student learning. The data revealed a disconnect between families, staff, and students in terms of partnering to support student learning.
The project developed by Selmanie included researching, recommending, and having the school install a new communication platform, Class Dojo. The platform provides a streamlined communication system accessible to all members of the school community, regardless of their preferred language.
In addition, her project involved incentivizing family participation in Learning Night and other events. Learning Night, which will be held in June, will provide the opportunity to collectively create a system for staff and families to support student learning. Leading up to Learning Night, students on the FCSE have been hosting Student Voice Sessions to gather student feedback on their needs and insights into their learning.
Selmanie says her UCAPP experience has taught her how to be an administrator and given her practice being one, too. In addition to UCAPP’s redesign focus on parent engagement, she found the emphasis on equity and anti-racism key to her decision to join the program.
“This solidified my choice and was the only program I applied to,” she says.
Sherry Farmer, a special education teacher at Jeffrey Elementary School in Madison, Connecticut, also focused on parents for her UCAPP capstone project. She says she realized that more affluent communities like Madison still need to focus on family engagement, even though it’s “easy to assume that it’s not an issue there.”
“It became apparent during the pandemic that there is more work to be done in making parents true partners in our work so they can understand the ‘why’ behind educational and curriculum decisions and feel confident in their ability to support their children,” Farmer says.
The initial idea for the project came from parent survey feedback from the school district in the spring of 2020, when schools first closed due to the pandemic. Parents, Farmer says, “indicated feelings of frustration and misunderstanding surrounding curriculum, instruction, and how to support their children in this new model of teaching and learning.”
Farmer’s project included reviewing data from parent surveys and working with a team of educators across the district to determine next steps. They collectively decided to begin with live webinar series addressing six specific topics during the first trimester of the school year. From follow-up surveys, they discovered that while parents appreciated the webinars, parents of kindergarteners indicated a need for more specific support in foundational reading skills, and parents of juniors and seniors wanted more insights into college readiness.
Many families in the district have the economic means to hire external college counselors. Still, some felt lost in the process or were unable to afford that support. Panels on “Navigating the College Selection Process” were designed to feature various types of higher education institutions (a local Connecticut college, a Big Ten school, a community college, and a trade school). These panels were converted to webinars and shared with the high school students and their parents.
“I was hesitant to take on a project this large in scale, but it turned out to be one of the best learning experiences I had while in the UCAPP program.”
– Sherry Farmer ’21 6th Year
Webinars focused on literacy and reading skills were sent to the kindergarten parents, with students receiving packets to take home that included copies of all the games presented in the videos and a book that allowed them to practice various skills.
Originally, the project was going to serve Jeffrey Elementary exclusively, but the assistant superintendent invited Farmer to involve the district as a whole.
“Initially, I was hesitant to take on a project this large in scale, but it turned out to be one of the best learning experiences I had while in the UCAPP program,” she says.
The school district is already looking ahead to next year, when it hopes to continue sharing the webinars.
Reflecting on the program during Change Project Day, Tucker of the CSDE recommended to the future administrators that they “welcome and foster … relationships, keep an open mind and your ear to the group, because staying connected to the community you serve will benefit your work in the long run, sometimes in ways you may never expect.”
UConn Today (Neag School alumnus and U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona is featured)
UConn Today (Rachael Manzer, a doctoral student in curriculum and instruction, is featured)