Rankings
and awards – psychological foundations/QME

The College of Education and Human Development has consistently
ranked among the best professional schools of education in the U.S. In
the 2010 U.S.News & World Report rankings the Department
of Educational Psychology was ranked 7th best in the U.S. in the most
recent rankings.
Although rankings for the psychological foundations and quantitative
methods tracks are not available,
the program is distinguished by the success enjoyed by its faculty and
graduates.
2007 APA Award
The Department of Educational Psychology at the University of
Minnesota was awarded the 2007 APA Innovative Practices in Graduate
Education in Psychology Award for preparing doctoral students for
academic positions which include teaching statistics. This program
that prepares graduate students to become excellent teachers of
statistics is the only program of its kind in the United States.
Read more at "Statistically
speaking, they are ahead of the curve."
Students
PsyF/QME graduate student awards in leadership, teaching,
and research
Graduates
Somwung Pitiyanuwat,
director of the Office of National Standards and Quality Assessment
in Thailand, received the College’s first Distinguished
International Alumni Award in 1997, and the University’s
Outstanding Achievement Award in 2004.
Faculty
Learning and cognition/educational technology
Jay Samuels is one of the
best known researchers and experts on reading in the world. In
addition to his numerous publications, Dr. Samuels has been elected
to the Reading Hall of Fame. His research interests include the
development of materials and methods for improving word recognition,
fluency, comprehension, and research on how to facilitate the young
reader's understanding of moral themes. Dr. Samuels has also won the
College of Education and Human Development's Distinguished Teaching
Award and in 2007 received the Minnesota Academy of Reading (MAR)
Award for his distinguished career and significant contributions to
the field of literacy as an educational researcher and literacy
educator.
William Bart has published
numerous studies on cognitive diagnostic testing and on the relationship
between knowledge and reasoning relationship, and is currently pursuing
research on the development of critical thinking and other reasoning
skills among college students and adults, the cognitive benefits of
educational software and the utility of origami and other Japanese
educational activities on the development of spatial reasoning among
American children. Dr. Bart is a Fellow of the American Psychological
Society and has won the College's Distinguished Teaching Award.
Bob Tennyson has published many papers on cognitive learning and complex
cognitive processes, intelligent systems, simulations, testing and
measurement, instructional design, and advanced learning technologies,
and is currently editor of the scientific journal Computers in Human
Behavior.
Social psychological and social
developmental processes in educational psychology
David W. Johnson is one of the
most influential social psychologists in the world, with numerous
research papers and books. Dr. Johnson's research interest focus on
cooperative, competitive, and individualistic efforts; conflict
resolution (structured controversy and peer mediation), and social
psychology of groups. Dr. David W. Johnson and Dr. Roger Johnson,
professor of curriculum and instruction, won the 2007 Brock
International Prize in Education, which recognizes individuals for
innovative and effective ideas in education. Their selection marks
the first time in the award's six-year history that two individuals
have been chosen as recipients. The brothers are co-founders and
co-directors of the College's Cooperative Learning Center. Dr.
Johnson received the 2008 Distinguished Contributions to Education
Award from the American Educational Research Association (AERA).
Geoffrey Maruyama has published
numerous papers on social influence processes in schools, cooperative
learning and constructive controversy, and school structures that focus
on finding ways to improve student outcomes in heterogeneous schools.
Dr. Maruyama has also published the book Basics of Structural Equation
Modeling.
Tony Pellegrini is a well-known expert in observational research methods,
children's peer relations, and social contextual influences on classroom
achievement. Dr. Pellegrini has published many articles and books in
these areas, and is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association.
Quantitative methods in education
Ernest Davenport has
published several papers examining mathematical artifacts of
statistical procedures, especially those used in measurement. Dr.
Davenport has also won the College of Education and Human
Development's Community Service Award and the University of
Minnesota’s 2007 Outstanding Community Service Award for his work
preparing groups for the ACT/SAT exams.
Mark Davison's expertise in
measurement in general, and multidimensional scaling in particular, is
nationally recognized. He is currently co-director of the
Minnesota Interdisciplinary Training
in Educational Research (MITER) program. MITER is one of ten
federally funded pre-doctoral training programs preparing a new
generation of researchers whose ability to apply experimental
methodology and cognitive sciences to practical educational issues will
place them at the forefront of research and academic endeavors
worldwide. In addition to many research papers, Dr. Davison has
published the book Multidimensional Scaling.
Robert delMas has
published several papers on the development of students' statistical
understanding and reasoning. He has been a co-investigator with Joan
Garfield on several NSF-funded projects that have developed software,
curriculum, and assessment materials for teaching introductory
statistics. He is the author of a simulation tool, Sampling SIM, that
can help students develop a conceptual understanding of sampling
distributions. Bob delMas and Martha Bigelow (curriculum and
instruction) were two of four co-authors who received the 2007 Teachers
of English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) Award for
Distinguished Research for their paper "Literacy and the Processing of
Oral Recasts in Second Language Acquisition," published in the December
2006 issue of the TESOL Quarterly.
Joan Garfield is a well-known
scholar in how students learn statistics and has won the Morse-Alumni
Distinguished Teaching Professor of Educational Psychology, the
College of Education and Human Development’s Distinguished Teaching
Award, and the 2005-06 Award for Outstanding Contributions to Graduate
and Professional Education. Dr. Garfield received a lifetime achievement
award from the
Consortium for the Advancement of Undergraduate Statistics Education
(CAUSE) in May 2007. She is also a fellow of the American Statistical Association and
an elected member of the International Statistical Institute.
Michael Harwell has published
papers in nonparametric statistics, meta-analysis, and measurement. Dr.
Harwell has also studied the effectiveness of
educational models purporting to increase student learning by increasing
teaching quality via intensive professional development activities.
Frances Lawrenz's work in evaluation and
science education in particular has made her a nationally known figure
in these arenas. In addition to her many grants from the National
Science Foundation, Dr. Lawrenz has published several papers on program
evaluation. Dr. Lawrenz has won the College of Education and Human
Development’s Gordon M. A. Mork Outstanding Educator and the Robert H.
Beck Faculty Teaching Awards and is a University of Minnesota award
recipient for Outstanding Contributions to Graduate and Professional
Education.
Jeff Long has expertise in methods
of longitudinal data analysis and in the application of multivariate
methods to ordinal data, and has published papers in several journals in
quantitative methods. Dr. Long has also regularly applied his
statistical expertise to substantive topics in psychology, such as
validating instruments designed to assess various clinical disorders.
Michael Rodriguez
has expertise in understanding the psychometric properties of tests,
such as the effects of item formats and the use of constructed-response
versus multiple-choice items, and in methods for improving the way that
schools use large-scale test information for planning and evaluation
purposes. Dr. Rodriguez has also conducted several validity studies of
Latino youth development program evaluation instruments. Dr. Rodriguez
is a recipient of the College of Education and Human Development’s
Community Service Award; the Robert H. Beck Faculty Teaching Award;
and the University of Minnesota's 2009 Award for Outstanding
Contributions to Postbaccalaureate, Graduate, and Professional
Education; and is a member of the Board of Directors of the National Council on
Measurement in Education.
Collectively, these
faculty have a distinguished teaching and research record that speaks to
the high quality of the psychological foundations/QME programs.
February 2009
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