Alumni
and student profiles

Doug Fuchs
Hometown: Brooklyn, NY
Degrees:
Johns Hopkins University: B.A., psychology, 1971
University of Pennsylvania: M.S., education, 1973
University of Minnesota: Ph.D., educational psychology, 1978
Current occupation: Professor of special education, Vanderbilt
University, TN and co-director, Institute of Learning and Accommodation,
John F. Kennedy Center for Human Development
Lynn Fuchs
Hometown: Freehold, NJ
Degrees:
Johns Hopkins University: B.A., humanities, 1972
University of Pennsylvania: M.S., education, 1973
University of Minnesota: Ed.S., educational psychology, 1979; Ph.D.,
educational psychology, 1981
Current occupation: Professor of special education, Vanderbilt
University, TN and co-director, Institute of Learning and
Accommodation, John F. Kennedy Center for Human Development
"The faculty at the University of Minnesota modeled for us the type of collaborative relationships that researchers and practitioners can forge."
After earning master's
degrees in education at the University of Pennsylvania, Lynn and
Doug Fuchs were attracted to the University of Minnesota's Department of
Psycho-educational Studies' reputation for producing excellent
researchers, and came here to pursue doctoral degrees.
The Fuchs agree that one strength of the department is its
requirement that students understand the importance of database research
and the need to test educational practices against scientific methods.
Says Doug: "As a graduate student, I noticed that faculty didn't
always agree on substance, but they all agreed on the methods that
should be used to explore the substance. People could have differing
perspectives, but they could talk about their different perspectives
because they shared this larger understanding."
Both Lynn and Doug enjoy doing research--the challenge of reading
scholarly literature, spending time in schools, talking with people on
the front lines to understand what the important practical issues are,
and then combining the practical knowledge with the scholarly knowledge
to find ways to make a difference. Their current work involves
coordinating educational research in low income schools to develop and
evaluate the effectiveness of instructional programs for K-12 children.
The Fuchs use the skills they gained at the College every day,
especially methods for rigorous field research. "If we were not in
close and productive relationships with school people, we would not be
able to accomplish what we have," explains Doug. "That whole
process of working on tough school-based programs always connects us
with many others in the field who are working as hard as we are."
Although they have been at Vanderbilt for 16 years, the Fuchs still
stay in touch with college faculty and try to keep their closest
advisors in the University of Minnesota. Stan Deno, Lynn's major
advisor, remains a close colleague and has come to visit for the past 16
years, along with the Fuchs' colleague Joe Jenkins, to help analyze
their research.
Not only do the Fuchs teach the same subject at the same school,
they've been co-editors of the Journal of Special Education for
the past 13 years and raised a son together, now 23.

Na'im Madyun
Hometown: Helena, AR
Degrees: Morehouse College: B.A., psychology, May 1997
University of Minnesota: Seeking Ph.D., educational psychology, May 2002
Current occupation: Student; family man
There's no easy blueprint for the school psychology
student; it could lead you to plan a mural, stand on top of chairs
reciting "O Captain, My Captain," and write a research paper
all in the course of a day. Na'im Madyun, Ph.D. student in school
psychology, has done all of this and more.
"I feel I am at the cutting
edge of the field; my professors and colleagues have shaped and are
shaping the field and I get to a be a part of it."
Na'im's time in the school psychology program has taught him that
"resiliency is earned, not given."
When asked why he came to school here, Na'im responds: "Is there
any other place to be?" He explains further: "I was part of an
undergraduate research program at the U of M and I felt comfortable with
the environment and was seduced by its reputation and national
respect."
He considers the program's strongest point its "humanness...I
feel as though I'm talking to real people with real strengths and
weaknesses that are visible and not just a first and last name, an
author or researcher...this realness makes it easier for me to
truthfully evaluate my field and my potential place in it."
"A school psychologist is kind of like a doctor for schools. You view the
school like a body, and your job is to keep it healthy."
When asked about the faculty, Na'im proclaims: "They are
genuine. You see their weaknesses and flaws along with their strengths.
You're given the good, the bad, the ugly. It makes the field less
intimidating to have some of the big people in the field as your
teachers. You take some classes from some of the movers and
shakers." He considers the faculty "movers and shakers"
because of their research and connections with government policy.
Students gain hands-on experience assisting the faculty with writing
chapters and grants. Na'im feels a real sense of community in the school
psychology program; students talk to faculty by first name, take a lot
of their courses together, and do a lot of group and team work. Na'im
explains that "you get to know the people the year before you and
behind you pretty well." He describes his interaction with other
students as a "comfortable mixture of competition, support, with a
sprinkle of curiosity."
School Psychology Student Association
(SPSA), an association students are required to join, focuses on
collaboration, interpersonal communication, bridging gaps and bringing
groups together. Through this organization, Na'im has learned that
interpersonal communication and collaboration is key to the school
psychologist...and anyone else, for that matter.
Na'im plans to become a school psychologist and teach one class at
the college level. In the short term, he hopes to intern somewhere in
the inner-city with the African American population.
Na'im details issues school psychologists face as: handling crisis
intervention, connecting communities to school, strengthening
neighborhoods, trying to do less assessment and more intervention and
prevention, developing afterschool activities, and determining why
students are failing.
What motivates Na'im to pursue the challenging field of school
psychology? "Opportunity for change: the change I can make by being
a person in the field." He feels most passionate about improving
opportunity and education for African Americans, primarily by connecting
community to schools, improving outcomes for students.
Tina Patane
Hometown: Minneapolis, MN
Degrees: Notre Dame: B.A., English and sociology, 1994
University of Minnesota: Seeking Ph.D., educational psychology, May 2002
Current occupation: Student; research assistant; lab instructor
In the words of Tina Patane, Ph.D. student in foundations of
educational psychology, the
program's mission is "making the leap from theory to application
for educators of all kinds"administrators and policy-setters, for
instanceand "to establish theory and make it apply to real-life
educational issues."
"There's a nice foundation of established faculty research that you can tap
into, but there's flexibility in the program to use that expertise as a springboard to pursue your own research."
Tina became interested in educational psychology through work she did
for several educational intervention programs, such as Head Start in
Atlanta. She liked the College's program because it is top-ranked
nationally. Aware that the College has a strong faculty in reading and
narrative comprehension, Tina chose to specialize in learning and
cognition.
Students whose emphasis is learning and cognition study the
conditions under which individuals learn, the cognitive and intellectual
structures that support learning, and the psychological factors involved
in planning instruction. "I think of foundations as a theory and
research-focused area of ed. psych.," Tina says. Research topics range
from narrative comprehension to theories of cooperative learning to
conflict resolution, education management, children's play behaviors,
motivation and math scores, and technology.
"There's a place here for any focus that has to do with human
learning."
Foundations students tend to be interested in research in one or more
of the following areas: decision making, problem solving, artificial
intelligence, text comprehension, computer-based learning, mathematical
and causal reasoning, teaching effectiveness, cognitive diagnostic
testing, and/or instructional technology.
One program strength is the diversity of background, interests, and
goals of students and faculty. Students in various department programs
get to know each other through statistics core courses, research methods
courses, and the process of written and oral pre-lim exams. Tina notes
that foundations is flexible and accommodating about how you pace
yourself in the program, allowing students "the ability to move
forward with ideas as a broad range of interests and specializations
pull together." Students all face similar challenges, and there's a
sense of community among people who have assistantships.
Some students plan to become academics, others hope to pursue public
or private research. Many people hope to work on textbooks, educational
measurement, and test creation at the government level or for private
foundations. When she graduates, Tina will look for opportunities to
practice both research and teaching...wherever those opportunities may
be.
Tina has always tried to gain experience in both teaching and
research. "I've had the opportunity to do a lot of teaching here.
Teaching at the college level is what I want to do." The college
provides plenty of opportunities for teaching; Tina has been a T.A. for
several courses, and has taught in the community.
She also works as a research assistant for the College's Center for
Applied Research and Educational Improvement (CAREI). Her research team
is doing a national study of afterschool programs. This research
connects conceptually with classwork because CAREI studies the impact of
all types of education programs. Says Tina, "there's always overlap
between the work you're doing in your classes."

Kay Thomas
Hometown: Minneapolis, MN
Degrees:
Macalester College: B.A., psychology and religion, 1963
University of Minnesota: M.A.,
History, 1974; M.A., educational psychology, 1982; Ph.D., educational
psychology, 1985
Current occupation: Director, International Student and
Scholar Services and President, NAFSA: Association of International
Educators
Ever since she was an undergrad, Kay Thomas knew she wanted to
work at a university. She thought she wanted to be a dean. She turned
out to be Director of International Student and Scholar Services (ISSS)
and President of NAFSA.
"CSPP was the greatest, most practical degree for
the job I have now."
As an undergrad working on a B.A. in psychology at Macalester
College, Kay attended a big lecture at the University of Minnesota by
B.F. Skinner. The lecture made her realize she didn't want to do strict
psychology because it seemed too scientific, lacking a human element.
She resonated right away with educational psychology, a separate
department at the University that rated higher at the time than the
psychology program (It was ranked the best program in the country...with
only three full-time faculty!).
Study abroad experiences in Greece and Germany led her to a job
working with exchange programs in ISSS. Kay knew she wanted to stay in
higher education and loved the international environment, so she
remained with ISSS.
“So much of our culture
is out of the reach of our own awareness. We aren’t aware of
what is right or wrong to us until we’re confronted with
something different.”
She says the counseling and student personnel psychology (CSPP)
program was great preparation for her career. She counsels
international students, working closely with the University Counseling
Service and Boynton Mental Health. Kay uses the skills she learned at
CSPP every day: counseling skills, group skills, organizational
development issues.
CSPP taught her how much we are a product of our cultures. Her
dissertation asked "do cultural values impact a student or client's
preference for counselor style?"
In her dissertation, Kay examined how people can't remove themselves
from the culture; the norms are different for students brought up in an
individualist culture like the U.S. than for people with more
collectivist upbringings. Counselors need to see how they're reacting to
patients in terms of cultural values, because people feel more
comfortable in situations that mesh with their cultural upbringing.
In addition to her role in ISSS, Kay has maintained ties with CSPP by
teaching a cross-cultural counseling course since 1980. Says Kay:
"I had my best time ever this year. This was the year I was going
to take time off. But this class has been just great."
As adjunct faculty in P&A, comparative and international
development education, she has served on committees, and she teaches
skills to pharmacists in a course on social cultural pharmacy with
former CSPP classmate Bruce Benson.
In fact, she has kept in contact with quite a few of her former
classmates in CSPP. Kay recalls being part of a close class of 16 going
for a Ph.D. "A strength of CSPP was they got interesting people;
they brought in tons of experience, plus they were interesting people
you wanted to get to know better."
Students of her class went in pretty diverse and evenly divided
directions: consulting with businesses, private practices, higher
education, and industry.
When asked how she would explain the program to someone who knows
nothing about it, Kay describes CSPP as the "application of
psychology to educational environments...wherever you have people and
you want to maximize their effectiveness." It is a
science/practitioner program, using both theory and practice, with
students learning through internships in addition to what they're taught
in the classroom.
More CSPP alums
were interviewed for the College alumni magazine, The Link, Fall
1999.
Revised 2001
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