College of Education and Human Development

Department of Educational Psychology

William Bart

  • Professor

William Bart

Areas of interest

  • Creativity
  • Critical thinking
  • Gifted and talented education
  • Chess training and its educational and psychological effects
  • Cognitive research with artificial participants
Degrees

PhD, University of Chicago

Biography

My years in the graduate program in measurement, evaluation, and statistical analysis at the University of Chicago allowed me to study with scholars such as Benjamin S. Bloom, R. Darrell Bock, and Benjamin Wright. There I developed my interest in the relationships among cognition, instruction, and testing. Presently I am pursuing that interest through research on thinking skills and on the development of talents and gifts among students. The issue of how research in cognition and testing can inform effective school practice also interests me. My students and I are investigating various topics in learning and cognition: (a) the assessment and development of critical thinking skills among youth, college students, and other adults; (b) the utility of origami and chess and other complex games on the development of basic reasoning skills and scholastic achievement levels among youth; and (c) the utilization of ideas from expertise research in the enhancement of cognitive skills and scholastic achievement levels among disadvantaged youth. I am also investigating with one graduate student selected features of creativity. I am a Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science and a Fellow of the American Educational Research Association.

I also coordinate the certificate program in talent development and gifted education.

Courses I teach

  • EPsy 1905—Freshman Seminar: Beginner’s Chess and 21st Century Thinking Skills
  • EPsy 3101—Creativity and Intelligence: An Introduction
  • EPSY 5101—Intelligence and Creativity
  • EPSY 5191—Education of the Gifted and Talented
  • EPSY 8111—Seminar: Human Expertise and Its Development
  • EPSY 8290—Special Topics: Seminar in Psychological Foundations
Publications

Bart, W. M., Ritter, J., & Ritter, N. (2021). An empirical study of artificial participants - A factor affecting game length in chess. Journal of Technological Advancements, 1(1). DOI: 10.4018/JTA.20210101.oa2

Bart, W.M. (2021). Insights on teaching chess to undergraduate university students. Revista Mundi Engenharia, Tecnologia e Gestão, Parangua, PR, v.6, n.1, p. 318-01, 318-10, 2021. DOI: 10.21575/25254782rmetg2021vol6n11495

Bart, W.M. (2021). Insights on teaching chess to elderly citizens. Revista Mundi Engenharia, Tecnologia e Gestão, Parangua, PR, v.6, n.1, p. 316-01, 316- 10, 2021. DOI: 10.21575/25254782rmetg2021vol6n11492

Book chapter

Bart, W. M. (2021). What competitive chess can learn from eSports: Present and future prospects. In Andrews, S., & Crawford, C. (Eds.). (Chapter 4, pp. 65-85). Handbook of research on pathways and opportunities into the business of esports. IGI Global. DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-7300-6

Presentations

Bart, W.M. (July 9, 2021). The advent of artificial creativity and Alpha Zero. Online paper presentation, Southern Oregon University Conference on Creativity, Ashland, Oregon.

Bart, W. (April, 2021). On the contributions of S. Jay Samuels. S. Jay Samuels Memorial, Online presentation. AERA Virtual Convention.

Bart, W.M. (November, 2020). Insights on teaching chess to elderly citizens. Online paper presentation, Chess Researchers International Meeting II, Brazil.

Bart, W.M. (November, 2020). Insights on teaching chess to undergraduate university students. Online paper presentation. Chess Researchers International Meeting II, Brazil.

Malen, M., Bart, W., & Resendiz, P. (November, 2020). 2e student experience Monitoring & reflecting on effectiveness of IEP & 504 accommodations. [Online poster presentation]. National Association of Gifted Children 66 th Annual Convention.