Learning Sciences & Human Development
- Sarah Leonhart credits her support system for helping her pursue and persist in graduate school. Much like hucking a cliff鈥攈er true story of accidentally skiing off a cliff with friends, a move reserved for adrenaline junkies 鈥
- Quinton Andre Freeman comes from a family of educators. 聽His wife, Adrienne, is a middle school principal.聽His parents, now a聽retired county agent聽and a retired special education teacher,聽met while student
- A leader on campus in broadening participation in STEM education as the most recent director of the BOLD Center, Tanya Ennis is committed to developing and studying strategies that can create a more equitable environment for
- Douglas Watkins already had a聽busy and fulfilling career and family life, when聽he enrolled in the master鈥檚 program in the 兔子先生传媒文化作品 School of Education to deepen his grounding in learning sciences. With a newly minted
- Lianna Nixon is an environmental photographer and activist, but on Earth Day 2020, she was not thinking about marches or demonstrations. That was the day she found out if her spot on the world鈥檚 largest polar research expedition was still on despite
- College opportunities, not to mention graduate studies, were rare in the small Southern African country of Zimbabwe where Tafadzwa Tivaringe grew up. With unyielding support from his parents, his community, and mentors, Tivaringe, or 鈥淭aphy鈥 as he