Honored to lead this innovative project forward! Read more here.
Recipient of Women's Center Mentoring Award
I was honored and humbled to receive the Vanderbilt University Margaret Cuninggim Women’s Center Mentoring Award this year.
See article here.
Video project receives NSF grant
My new video-ethnographic project has received a $251,327 grant from the National Science Foundation - Sociology for 2022-24. Learn more about the grant and project here.
Abstract
The objective of this project is to examine through in-home video footage how families from different social class backgrounds develop early-life skills, attitudes, and expectations in their children. There is overwhelming evidence of the importance of children’s earliest years and the power of parenting in shaping young children’s skill development. Each year, the United States invests billions of dollars into programs to support parents including through parent education classes, parenting supports, and home visitation programs. Developing parenting initiatives that better address families’ daily needs and reflect their knowledge and expertise requires a deeper understanding of the circumstances of children’s lives. This in-home video study of parent-child interactions is an unprecedented examination of how families support their children’s early learning.
Data for this study come from 5,700 hours of video footage contained in 463,000 discrete video clips, from a two-week in-home video-ethnographic study of 21 families, each with a child aged 2-4. These data are analyzed through a multi-step process that includes completing daily and thematic content logs, writing narrative summaries and memos, and selecting episodes for closer analysis. Outcomes of the project include rich descriptions of the everyday, in-situ parenting practices of families with young, preschool-aged children, and new measures of parenting behaviors and new concepts to be tested in future studies. These outcomes will enhance public conversations concerning families’ daily accomplishments and their challenges in supporting their young children.
Recipient of Vanderbilt Chancellor's Award for Research
I was honored to receive Vanderbilt University’s Chancellor’s Award for Research on Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion for Scripting the Moves. You can read about it here.
Scripting the Moves wins three book awards
My book, Scripting the Moves, has received the 2022 Bourdieu Award for the Best Book in Sociology of Education from the Sociology of Education section of the American Sociological Association. It also received the 2022 Independent Publisher Book Award (Gold) in Education - Commentary/Theory. It was also recognized by the Society of Professors of Education with the 2022 Outstanding Book Award. I’m humbled and honored!
Book Talk Airs on C-SPAN
C-SPAN2 Book TV aired my book talk on December 21, 2021!
Amherst Reads October Book Feature
Thrilled to have my book featured as part of my alma mater’s reading series. Check out my conversation with Dr. Travis Bristol at Amherst Reads.
New Book Released
My first book was released in June 2021. You can read about it here.
Recipient of Discovery Grant
I was awarded one of Vanderbilt’s Discovery Grants to support my project on how children navigate rules and authority. Read more about the grant here.
New Editorial in Washington Post
Mira Debs, Chris Torres, and I discuss whether no-excuses schools can change in our new editorial on Valerie Strauss’ Answer Sheet.
Editorial in Education Week
Check out my new editorial, “The Harsh Discipline of No-Excuses Charter Schools: Is It Worth the Promise?”, with Mira Debs on our new article published in the American Educational Research Journal.
Quoted in Washington Post
See the article here.
Received ASA FAD Grant
I received a grant from the American Sociological Association, Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline, to study how parents teach young children self-direction and conformity.
Selected as an Emerging Education Policy Scholars (EEPS) Fellow
I was selected as part of the 2018-2019 cohort for the Emerging Education Policy Scholars (EEPS) program hosted by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute and the American Enterprise institute.
Quoted by the Guardian
I was quoted in the Guardian about strict discipline.
Provost Research Studio Grant Recipient
I received a Provost Research Studios grant to support a book manuscript workshop
New Article Published
I recently published a new article in Sociology of Education on how teachers respond to increasing control over their work.
Point-Counterpoint piece
Along with my colleague, Maury Nation, I wrote a Point-Counterpoint piece on no-excuses discipline in the UCEA Review.
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Invitation to Speak at Yale & Debate the Yale Political Union
I spoke on no-excuses schools at the Yale Educational Studies program. In addition I debated the Yale Political Union! The topic - Does Strict Discipline Harm Students?