Dissertation Projects

Collaborative Video Analysis to Support Pre-Service Teacher Noticing and Learning toward Action-Based Orientations to Language

Instruction for students classified as English Learners (EL-classified) in the US has been dominated by formalist orientations to language development that view learners as blank slates and often focus instruction on acquiring decontextualized linguistic forms in segregated learning spaces. Many language scholars argue that these orientations are insufficient in promoting meaningful language and content learning and limit EL-classified students’ contributions and participation. In contrast, sociocultural and ecologically-informed scholarship proposes more equitable, action-based orientations to language development, where all learners are positioned to co-construct meaning in carefully scaffolded dialogic activity across the curriculum. This dissertation project explores the potential of collaborative video analysis to target Pre-Service Teacher (PST) noticing and learning towards these action-based orientations. This qualitative study follows a group of PSTs pursuing History-Social Science secondary teaching credentials and their Teacher Supervisor across multiple collaborative video analysis sessions in a US university-based teacher preparation program. In these sessions, participants worked together to narrate, re-narrate, and re-envision videos of PST teaching with a unique focus on noticing student language use and imagining more action-based language supports. Both interactional and individual data were collected including video recordings and field notes of the collaborative sessions and participant interviews and written reflections. I applied an ethnomethodological approach and Cross-Event Discourse Analysis to collecting and analyzing interactional data including video recordings, transcripts, and participant observations of video analysis sessions, together with individual data including interview transcripts and written reflections from participants. Findings suggest that structured collaborative discourse around classroom videos contributed to important shifts in participant noticing and reasoning toward more equitable action-based orientations to student language use and EL-classified learner contributions in their discipline. This study highlights the unique potential of video-embedded, interactive sense making across the PST learning ecosystem to prepare PSTs to notice and take up more effective and equitable action-based orientations to instruction for EL-classified students in their discipline.

Benjamin M. James

Doctoral Candidate, UC Santa Cruz

Zoning out of Zoom and Zooming In towards Learning Experience Design to Support Undergraduate Teaching and Learning

My dissertation details three studies that will examine undergraduates online learning modalities through the COVID-19 pandemic. More specifically, my dissertation will first look across theories of mind-wandering and cognitive engagement and develop a model examining the social, cognitive, and behavioral impacts on students’ learning experiences while learning synchronously on Zoom. Then, I use this model and  mechanistic findings to conduct and inform a series of design-based research (DBR) studies in order to design, develop, and deploy an asynchronous online course grounded on the learning experience design (LXD) pedagogical paradigm. Finally, Study 3 will consider the affordances and constraints of Study 2 and further iterate on these designs to conduct a quasi-experimental study testing the efficacy of different interactive course elements (i.e. embedded video questions) in an online asynchronous undergraduate course grounded in LXD. Thus, across all three studies, I will critically examine how online course modalities and LXD pedagogies underlie social, cognitive, and behavioral factors influencing students’ learning experiences with the hope that such efforts will lead to the evidence-based implementation of pedagogical practices. The goal of this dissertation is to continue supporting a broad range of learners online, in-person, or hybrid learning modalities that address learners’ needs in a human-centered empathetic approach as the ever-changing landscape of teaching and learning in higher education continues to evolve.

Joseph Wong, M.A.

Doctoral Candidate, UC Irvine

Alumni Dissertation Projects

Promoting Equitable Pathways in Engineering and Career Technical Education

TBA

Jonathan Montoya

UC Irvine

The Influence of Immersive Experiences on Culturally Responsive Pedagogy: An Explanatory Sequential Mixed Methods Study

 My research examines the influence of a teacher intervention that focuses on the development of empathy and color consciousness, as a method to facilitate, motivate, and support the enactment of culturally responsive pedagogy. This study is an explanatory sequential mixed method design that uses a multitude of data including surveys, semi-structured interviews, classroom observations, and participant artifacts. I hope this research can help teachers feel supported and empowered in ways that promote the enactment of more culturally responsive teaching practices to meet the growing and shifting needs of students of color. The demographics of the United States’ public-school systems are becoming more diverse and culture is central to learning. Therefore, teachers must be prepared to take an asset-based approach that acknowledges, responds to, and celebrates students’ culture to design content, foster environments, and create opportunities that are equitable for a multicultural student demographic.

Khamia Powell, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

Designing Systems to Promote Collaboration and Systems Thinking in High School Science Group Discussion 

Preparation for the future workforce and citizenry requires students to learn collaborative skills to apply knowledge in new contexts and promote innovation. With the increasing integration of technology in learning environments, collaboration spans both human-human and human-technology relationships. In her dissertation, Ha designs collaborative chatbots, in collaboration with informal science educators, teachers, learners, and researchers, to scaffold collaboration and deeper learning of STEM content. The studies illustrate how multidimensional analyses of learner interactions can provide insights into social and cognitive processes guiding learning. They also illuminate how design tweaks can facilitate certain social and reasoning patterns, ones that enrich learning, human-human, and human-technology collaboration.

Ha Nguyen, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

Learning to enact equitable mathematics teaching practices through critical self-reflection: a study of primary teacher candidates

My dissertation project examines the role of critical reflection in supporting teacher candidates to develop their identities as equitable mathematics teachers and enact equitable practices in mathematics classrooms. Unequal learning opportunities in mathematics classrooms for children, particularly those from marginalized backgrounds, continue to persist. Rigid ways of acknowledging mathematical participation and competency continue to dominate many classrooms and systematically categorizes children into a hierarchy of intelligence, excluding those perceived as incompetent from learning opportunities. This has implications for children’s mathematical identities and future careers. Teacher education can play a significant role in disrupting these injustices. My study aims to develop a theoretical mapping of candidates’ different learning trajectories when engaged in critical self-reflection work and a protocol that teacher educators can utilize to support candidates’ learning.

Jiwon Lee, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

Civic engagement of marginalized youth: Friendship networks and motivation

Grounded in a long-term research-practice partnership, my dissertation investigates the role of social networks in the civic engagement of adolescents at a high school that serves primarily low-income Latinx students. First, I develop a novel model of youth civic motivation grounded in expectancy-value theory. Then, I apply longitudinal social network analysis techniques to distinguish between the effects of friendship formation and motivational antecedents on civic engagement. Through an asset-based approach that acknowledges agentic decisions regarding civic participation rather than framing behavior in terms of deficiency, I seek to understand psychosocial predictors of civic engagement for youth who are underrepresented in both research and policy. I aim to provide novel insight into the diverse manifestations of civic engagement in ways that inform practice, which I believe is especially important as our youth confront an increasingly contentious sociopolitical landscape.

Christopher Wegemer, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

The Latinx Male Teacher Pipeline

My research looks into how Latinx men conceptualize the teaching profession and how that functions to either motivate them to pursue a career as educators or dissuades them from the profession. This is done using semi-structured interviews of Latinx male high school students, teacher credential students and veteran teachers to track how this conceptualization changes throughout the leaky Latinx Male Teacher Pipeline. I hope this research can be used to recruit diverse educators by creating culturally responsive strategies that speak to what truly motivates these men to pursue a career as teachers, which is pivotal if our educators are to keep pace with our increasingly diverse student population.

Juan Gaytan, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

Understanding the Practices and Processes of Doing Networked Improvement Science in a Teacher Preparation Network

This study focuses on examining how networked improvement communities (NICs) are enacted using a NIC run by the California Teacher Education Research and Improvement Network. The work of performing NICs is comprised of micropolitics and power relations that shape what improvement efforts focus on, what aims they seek to accomplish, and how they attempt to accomplish their aims. I seek to unveil these dynamics to understand how NICs operate and in what ways the processes can be improved, particularly for advancing equity and social justice.

Carlos Sandoval, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

[Re]imagining Student Mathematical Engagement through Problem Posing Pedagogy

This study focuses on examining how networked improvement communities (NICs) are enacted using a NIC run by the California Teacher Education Research and Improvement Network. The work of performing NICs is comprised of micropolitics and power relations that shape what improvement efforts focus on, what aims they seek to accomplish, and how they attempt to accomplish their aims. I seek to unveil these dynamics to understand how NICs operate and in what ways the processes can be improved, particularly for advancing equity and social justice.

Priyanka Agarwal, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

Designing After School Science Programs to Connect Schools, Homes, and Communities

The purpose of this study is to investigate how to develop science after school programs that support the deep and meaningful STEM engagement of girls of color. This project will focus on how to empirically test design features in a research practice partnership with a local school.

David Liu, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

Participation in a Video Club: Influences on Teachers and Teaching, Students and Learning

This study investigates the critical discourses developed by high school science teachers engaged in a semester-long video club professional development series. The focus of the video club was to enhance participants’ abilities to facilitate students’ thinking and reasoning in science.

Tara Barnhart, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

Appropriating and Enacting Literacy Teaching Practices in the Context of the Pathway Project Professional Development Program

In this study, I investigate the types of pedagogical tools middle school English teachers take up and adapt from literacy professional development. Moreover, I am also interested in how these tools shape their own learning as well as their students’ learning. Finally, I also seek to understand cognitive and contextual factors that may influence how teachers are enacting these tools in their classrooms.

Huy Chung, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

Broadening participation in mathematics for students from non-dominant backgrounds: The relationship between teacher practice, noticing and pedagogical commitments

This study draws on the construct of teacher noticing to examine how teachers attend to and reason about classroom features that influence learning opportunities for non-dominant groups. Just as research examines how teachers’ knowledge, beliefs, and identities influence their practice, I use the lens of noticing to explain the cognitive processes teachers use engaging in these teaching practices. Through this work, I seek to make explicit the noticing of secondary mathematics teachers and the relationship between their noticing, practices and pedagogical commitments.

Janet Garcia-Mercado, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

Physical Therapist Students’ Clinical Reasoning and Characterizations of Practice

This study investigates how doctor of physical therapy students engage in clinical problem solving. Specifically, I examine the types of problems students frame and solve during an encounter with a patient and how their perspectives on practice influence their clinical decision making.

Sarah Gilliland, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

A Model of Professional Development for Field-Based Teacher Educators: Addressing Historical Problems Through Local Collaboration

This dissertation examines a professional development intervention that brought together university supervisors of student teaching with partner classroom mentor teachers to develop a shared vision of mathematics instruction and shared approaches to mentoring pre-service teachers in the field. The study contributes to practice-based teacher education by offering a model design university-school collaborations aimed at supporting pre-service teachers in connecting learning across university and field site settings.

Jessica Tunney, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

A Longitudinal Investigation of Beginning Teachers’ Conceptions and Enactments of Equity-Minded Mathematics Practices

This study examines the factors that impact the retention and attrition of culturally and linguistically diverse elementary school teachers and support or impede their development and implementation of reform-based, equity-minded mathematics practices.

Cathery Yeh, Ph.D.

UC Irvine

Learning Affordances for Teachers and Students in a Summer Lab School

I examine an alternative teacher certification program aimed at preparing primarily Latinx and African American teacher candidates for instruction in segregated urban schools. In this project I work closely with first year teachers as they prepare and begin teaching in their own classroom to identify ways of improving urban science teacher preparation and opportunities for students to meaningfully engage with and learn science.

Doron Zinger, Ph.D.

UC Irvine