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College of Education

Our Team

Our team of leading researchers and staff are working collaboratively with teachers, state agencies and organizations to improve long-term outcomes for children, families and communities.

If you're interested in joining our growing team, send us a letter of interest and your CV.

Director and Assistant Director

 

Project Directors and Program Coordinators

 

Senior Scientists

 

Scientists

Ali S. Brian, Ph.D.

Ali S. Brian, Ph.D.

Ali S. Brian is an Assistant Professor of Physical Education at the USC College of Education. Her research focuses on fundamental motor skill competence in disadvantaged, young children, including interventions that change motor competence in historically developmentally delayed children, and exploring the relationship between motor competence, perceived motor competence and physical activity within the context of preventing childhood obesity.

Ryan G. Carlson, Ph.D.

Ryan G. Carlson, Ph.D.

Ryan Carlson is an Assistant Professor in Counselor Education in the Department of Educational and Developmental Science at the USC College of Education and a licensed mental health counselor. He has worked in private practice and community mental health. He is published in the areas of outcomes for low-income couples and individuals who received relationship education; efficacious recruitment/retention of low-income participants into research; and intimate partner violence typologies & implications for counseling.

Fred Greer, Ph.D.

Fred Greer, Ph.D.

Fred Greer is a Research Assistant Professor in the Department of Educational and Developmental Science at the USC College of Education. His expertise and research involves early childhood assessment, social-emotional behavior assessment, and early intervention. 

Bridget Miller, Ph.D.

Bridget Miller, Ph.D.

Bridget Miller is an Assistant Professor in science education in the Instruction and Teacher Education department at the USC College of Education. Her research investigates the integration of commercial technologies such as tablet computers and their use in the STEM classroom to support instructional objectives in authentic and meaningful ways.

David Stodden, Ph.D.

David Stodden, Ph.D.

David Stodden is  a Professor in the Department of Educational and Developmental Science at the College of Education. His research agenda focuses on promoting the acquisition and development of fundamental motor skills and the association of motor skill competence with physical activity, health-related physical fitness, perceived competence and obesity across the lifespan. 

 

Investigators

Kate Ascetta, Ph.D.

Kate Ascetta, Ph.D.

Kate Ascetta is an assistant professor of Early Childhood Special Education in the Department of Educational and Developmental Science. Her research interests include the development and assessment of effective instructional practices, specifically online, that promotes professional growth in teachers and leads to increased language and communication skills in young children.  Ascetta also had an interest in developing equitable education practices aimed to close the opportunity to gap experienced by some young children.

Robbie Ross, Ph.D.

Robbie Ross, Ph.D.

Robbie Ross investigates factors that influence the link between cognitive control skills and learning among young children, including peer effects, teaching practices, and children’s self-perceptions of skill. Her research is also focused on discovering the ways in which understanding these factors might shape how educators can best support the development of cognitive control skills in the classroom.

Melissa Strompolis, Ph.D.

Melissa Strompolis, Ph.D. 

Strompolis is Director of Research and Evaluation at the Children's Trust of South Carolina. She also serves as the leader for KIDS COUNT South Carolina, collecting and sharing data that informs decisions on child well-being. Her advocacy and policy work has been published in multiple professional publications and outlets, and she is chair of the national policy committee of the Society for Community Research and Action, Division 27 of the American Psychological Association.

Katie Wolfe, Ph.D.

Katie Wolfe, Ph.D.

Katie Wolfe is an Assistant Professor of Special Education in the Department of Educational and Developmental Science at the USC College of Education. Her research includes the development and implementation of interventions to promote language and communication skills in young children with autism, the synthesis of single-subject research to identify empirically-supported treatments, and the use of technology in training individuals to analyze single-subject data.

 

Postdoctoral Fellows

Megan Irwin, Ph.D.

Megan Irwin, Ph.D.

Megan Irwin is a postdoctoral fellow at the Yvonne & Schuyler Moore Child Development Research Center at USC. She received her Ph.D. in Kinesiology with a specialization in Motor Behavior from Auburn University. Her research focuses on improving motor skill competency and increasing physical activity in children and youth with and without disabilities.

 

Support Staff


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