Faculty
The school psychology program area faculty consists of six
core faculty and three adjunct faculty. A search for a tenure-track faculty
member is currently underway.
Matthew Kevin Burns, Ph.D.,
Andrews University
Dr. Burns is an associate professor of educational psychology and
has been with the school psychology program since 2004. Dr. Burns's
research interests center around academic interventions and systemic
implementation therof through a response-to-intervention (RtI)
model. Thus, he currently teaches a course and supervises a
practicum experience regarding the implementation of academic
interventios. Dr. Burns was a school
psychologist and special education supervisor in districts within
two states with varying student populations. He is also a past
president of the Michigan Association of School Psychologists and
was a faculty member for five years at Central Michigan University.
More specifically, Dr. Burns's research interests include establishing an instructional match between
curricular materials and individual student skill levels through
curriculum-based assessment for instructional design, effective methods for rehearsal and
practice in initial learning, and problem-solving teams. Dr. Burns is currently
the editor of Assessment for Effective Intervention, an associate
editor for School Psychology Review, the contributing editor
for RtI with the National Association of School Psychologists'
Communique, and serves on the editorial boards for Journal of
School Psychology, Psychology in the Schools, and Remedial
and Special Education. Moreover, Dr. Burns has co-written or
co-edited four books about RtI and was a co-author of School
Psychology: A blueprint for training and practice.
Theodore J.
Christ, Ph.D.,
University of Massachusetts
Dr. Christ is an assistant professor in the school psychology
program since 2005. He teaches courses in psycho-educational
assessment, legal and ethical issues in school psychology, and
supervises field-based practicum.
Dr. Christ's professional interests include (a) the
promotion, improvement, and evaluation of school-based problem
solving practices and data-based decision-making; (b) measurement
and assessment of achievement and aptitude (with a focus data
collection for problem solving activities); (c) psychometrics and
data analysis to identify, develop and implement useful instruments
and practices within school-based settings [such as curriculum based
assessment/measurement (CBA, CBM), dynamic indicators of basic
skills (DIBELS), and curriculum based evaluation (CBE)]; (d)
assessment linked intervention design and implementation to prevent
and remediate social and academic problems, and (e) early
intervention and prevention of social and academic problems.
Dr. Christ has published research on the
psychometric characteristics of CBM/CBA and school-based
interventions. Current and future research will continue to examine
school-based assessment and intervention. He is currently editing a
special issue of The Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment,
which will feature research on the components and implementation of
Response to Intervention models of service delivery. Dr. Christ
serves on the review boards of both The School Psychology Review
and Psychology in the Schools.
Sandra
Christenson, Ph.D., University of Minnesota
Dr.
Christenson is professor of educational and child
psychology and coordinator of the school psychology program at the University of Minnesota. Her research is focused on interventions which enhance student engagement with
school and learning, and identification of contextual
factors that facilitate student engagement and increase the
probability for student success in school. She is
particularly interested in populations that are most
alienated from traditional schooling practices and/or at
highest risk for non-school completion. Her recent
investigations are aimed at understanding how students make
a personal investment in learning and ways to promote the
role of families in educating students.
Dr. Christenson has
published extensively about theory, research, and strategies
for engaging parents in school and learning. She has served
on several editorial boards and is section editor for
School Psychology Quarterly and co-editor for the
book series, Applying Psychology to the Schools. Dr.
Christenson was the 1992 recipient of the Lightner Witmer
Award from American
Psychological Association (APA) for scholarship and early career
contributions to the field of school psychology.
Anastasia L. Hansen, Ph.D., University of Minnesota
Dr. Hansen holds a Ph.D. in psychology (school psychology) from the
University of Minnesota. She has worked as a school psychologist in the
Minneapolis Public Schools for the past three years, before joining the
U of M staff in fall of 2008. Dr. Hansen is the field placement
coordinator for the program, as well as a lecturer in the areas of
assessment and multicultural issues in education. Her teaching and
research interests include reducing bias in assessment, urban education,
LGBT issues, and at-risk groups in schools.
James Ysseldyke,
Ph.D., University of Illinois
Dr. Ysseldyke is professor of educational
psychology and graduate faculty of psychology. Dr. Ysseldyke's teaching interests focus on education and
development of students with mild disabilities and on
assessment in school contexts. Dr. Ysseldyke's research has
focused on issues and concerns in appropriate instruction of
students, especially those at the margins.
He currently is
directing two major national policy studies, one
investigating the effects of open enrollment (public school
choice) legislation, the other concerned with assessment of
educational outcomes for students and school systems. Dr. Ysseldyke is author of four major textbooks and two
tests and he is past editor of School Psychology International
and Exceptional Children. He is a fellow in the
School Psychology and Educational Psychology Divisions of
APA, was the 1974 recipient of the APA Lightner Witmer
Award, and the 1995 recipient of the Research Award from the
Council for Exceptional Children.
Adjunct faculty
Byron
Egeland, Ph.D., University of Iowa
Dr. Egeland is the Irving
B. Harris Professor of Child Psychology and adjunct
professor of educational psychology, and graduate faculty of
psychology. Dr. Egeland's teaching interests are in developmental psychopathology, research design,
and early development. He is principal investigator of the
Parent-Child Project, a longitudinal study of high-risk
children and their families. He also is principal
investigator of the observational study of high-risk
families in the JOBS and New Chance programs.
Dr. Egeland is
a member of the Board of the National Committee for
Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect, the Children's
Division of the American Psychological Association, and was
a member of the National Academy of Science Panel on Child
Abuse and Neglect. He is a fellow in the School Educational
and Clinical Psychology Divisions of the American
Psychological Association, and he is a fellow in the
American Psychological Society and the American Association
of Applied and Preventive Psychology. Dr. Egeland is
currently working on a project with the
Harris Programs.
Scott McConnell,
Ph.D., University of Oregon
Dr. McConnell is professor of educational
psychology and child psychology.
Dr. McConnell is also director of the Center for Early
Education and Development. Dr. McConnell's
teaching interests focus on the application of behavioral
assessment and intervention planning techniques in school
psychology, especially as used in early and preventive
intervention for academic and social problems.
His research
interests focus on children's development of necessary
skills for social interaction and school adjustment,
descriptive and intervention studies with children exposed
prenatally to drugs or alcohol, and the design of
intervention procedures that promote behavioral maintenance
through access to naturally occurring reinforcement
contingencies. Dr. McConnell was formerly the Director of
the Institute on Community Integration, a University
Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities.
Richard
Weinberg, Ph.D., University of
Minnesota
Dr. Weinberg is the Birkmaier Professor of Educational Leadership,
professor of child psychology, adjunct professor of
educational psychology, and graduate faculty of psychology.
Dr. Weinberg's teaching interests focus on the history
of child development, the application of current knowledge
about the development of children in the educational
enterprise, and psychoeducational assessment in various
contexts. He is the former director of the Institute of Child
Development and immediate past chair of the advisory council
for the University's Children, Youth, and Family
Consortium.
Dr. Weinberg is author of two textbooks, one on observation
and one an introduction to child development. His research
interests include the study of developmental behavior
genetics and individual differences in various domains of
psychological functioning. Dr. Weinberg is past-president of
the American Association of State Psychology Boards and a
Fellow of the School Psychology, Educational Psychology, and
Developmental Psychology Divisions of the American
Psychological Association, and he is a fellow and a member
of the board of directors of the American Psychological
Society.
He is currently involved in a collaborative project
at the Civitan International Research Center at the
University of Alabama in Burmingham working on a project
with academically capable Headstart children. He also is
involved in a project with the Harris
Programs.
Affiliate faculty
Brian
Abery, Ph.D., University of Minnesota
Dr. Abery is
coordinator of school-age services,
Institute on Community Integration, a University
Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities. Dr. Abery's teaching interests
focus on the education and community inclusion of students
with developmental disabilities. He is principal
investigator of several research projects designed to better
understand those factors related to the social and community
inclusion of children, young adults, and adults with
developmental disabilities as well as facilitate the
development of an enhanced sense of inclusion for this group
of individuals.
Dr. Abery directs a second program of
research aimed at developing conceptual frameworks and
strategies to assess and enhance the self-determination of
students with disabilities within home, school, and
community settings. He is co-editor of a recent book that
explores the challenges faced by the current system for
providing services to individuals with developmental
disabilities.
Yvonne Godber, Ph.D., University of Minnesota
Dr. Godber teaches the core academic and social-emotional intervention
course for graduate students. She became the coordinator for the newly
established Center of Excellence in Children's Mental Health (CECMH)
in September 2003. In this position, Yvonne works with University and
community partners to build connections and strengthen links between
research, practice, policy, and collaborative action in the state of
Minnesota on behalf of children and youth. CECMH is one of key actions
items for the President's
Initiative on Children, Youth, and Families, which is administered
by the Children, Youth,
and Families Consortium.
Prior to joining CECMH, Yvonne conducted policy
research at the National Center for Children in Poverty at Columbia
University. Her background as a school psychologist in the Utah public
schools continues to influence her strong interest in improving the
systems that surround and affect children's development and
well-being. Yvonne earned her M.A., S.C., and Ph.D. in school
psychology/educational psychology at the University of Minnesota, and
remains affiliated with the program as a lecturer and adviser.
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