Skip to Content Skip to Navigation

CEHD Wordmark - Print Version

Curriculum and Instruction
125 Peik Hall
159 Pillsbury Drive SE
Minneapolis, MN 55455
Voice: 612-625-4006
Fax: 612-624-8277

 

Walker

Susan Walker

Associate Professor
Ph.D, University of Wisconsin, Madison
family, youth and community

Family Social Science
Room 286 McNH
1985 Buford Ave
Tel: 612/624-1273

Office hours:
Thurs., 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.

Areas of Interest

Parent education, parenting and early education, use of technology in teaching and learning

IMPORTANT NEWS! JULY 2011

My office has moved to 286 McNeal Hall, St. Paul. You can still reach me by email at skwalker@umn.edu. My phone number has not changed (612-624-1273). (My office address on the top part of this page will change as soon as the paperwork is finalized).

Parent and family education programs are moving to the Department of Family Social Science on the St. Paul campus. The programs that are moving with me include the Family Education M.Ed./ professional studies degree, the parent and family education teacher licensure program, and the parent education online graduate certificate program. Updates regarding changes will be posted on each program's Web page as more information becomes available.

Research Interests

My teaching, research, and writing reflect my understanding of how richly people’s lives and their choices are influenced by others near (like family, friends) and far (like the media, culture, politics), and by their own personal histories. I appreciate that as professionals, we need to respect these many influences and offer our guidance within that personal context. My interests are clearly motivated by systems theorists and by Bronfenbrenner’s perspective of human ecology. Those I feel most deserving of my research and, by extension, our support are those vulnerable in our toxic society, such as families with limited resources, young children, adolescent girls and of course, parents.

My specific interests include the intersections between parenting and education settings that support children's development. For example,

  • how standard early education settings support the needs of parents, and serve as sites for parenting education
  • factors that influence parents choice of early care for their children, including aspects of culture, economics, and family structure
  • parents’ use of informal child care, and support to family, friend and neighbor caregivers
  • community based models of support for children’s school readiness
  • professional/personal sources of parent education (my dissertation research).

I am also exploring the use of technology in parent and family education for professionals and for the general public. Some avenues of my work include:

  • the development and evaluation of an online, interactive parenting education delivery program (Just in Time Parenting), and comparing the effectiveness of online versus hard copy methods of learning by new parents
  • delivery of formal graduate coursework for parent educators via online courses
  • use of media in popular culture, specifically television and film, to teach about family life. My online project, Families Illustrated, provides a database of ideas for teaching parent and family concepts with film and television.

I very much welcome you to join me in these pursuits and to share your passions with me.

Selected Publications

  1. Communications Technology: Does Quantity Matter?. Family and Consumer Sciences Research Journal. (Special issue on Families and Technology).

  2. Walker, S. (2011). Review of the book: Christakis, N and Fowler, J. (2009). Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives. Journal of Family Theory and Review.3 (3) 220-224.

  3. Walker, S. and Manoogian, M. (2011). Child care. In Rural families and work: Contexts, problems, and solutions., J. Bauer and E. Dolan, Eds. New York: Springer.

  4. Forry, N. and Walker, S. (2011). Child Care in Rural America, In Economic Restructuring and Family Wellbeing in Rural America, K. Smith and A. Tickamyer, Eds. The Pennsylvania State University Press.

  5. Walker, S. and Benson, L. (2011). The Spanking Debate: Stimulating Critical Thinking in the Undergraduate Classroom. Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences.

  6. Walker, S., Cline, H. and Cooke, B. (2010). Innovation with Integrity: Preparing Parent Educators Online. Michigan Family Review 14 (1). Available at http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/mfr/

  7. Walker, S. (2010). Changing technologies, changing learners: A challenge to parent and family education. National Council on Family Relations Report, Summer, F14-F16.

Revised July 2011

Return to top