UK College of Education Curriculum and Instruction
faculty and staff

JANICE ALMASI

JANICE F. ALMASI, Ph.D., University of Maryland

Dr. Almasi (vita in PDF) joined the faculty in 2004 and is the Carol Lee Robertson Endowed Professor of Literacy Education in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. Dr. Almasi also works in the Collaborative Center for Literacy Development. She teaches courses in elementary reading methods, reading theory, and reading research design. Her career began as an elementary school teacher and reading specialist in Maryland. She earned her doctoral degree in Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Maryland and was a postdoctoral fellow at the Learning Research and Development Center at the University of Pittsburgh. She was the recipient of the International Reading Association's Outstanding Dissertation of the Year Award in 1994 and the National Reading Conference's Outstanding Student Research Award in 1993. Her pedagogical and research endeavors have critically examined the contexts in which children learn from text. Her research focuses on patterns of social interaction, discourse, engagement, and cognitive processing during peer discussions of literature. She is currently working toward a developmental model of peer discussion. (in the news)

GARY J. ANGLIN

 

GARY J. ANGLIN, Ed.D., Indiana University

Dr. Anglin (vita in PDF) joined the faculty in 1980 and is now Associate Professor of Education and program coordinator of the Instructional Systems Design Program; full member of the Graduate School Faculty and past president of the Research and Theory Division, AECT. His current research interests are visual message design and cooperative computer-based instruction. Dr. Anglin's recent publications include: Visual message design and learning: The role of static and dynamic illustrations. In D.H. Jonassen (Ed.), Handbook of Research on Instructional Technology. New York: Macmillan and Washington, The Association for Educational Communications and Technology and; Instructional technology: Past, present and future, Englewood, CO: Libraries Unlimited. Dr. Anglin is chair of the instructional design program faculty.

Jana Bouwma-Gearhart

 

JANA BOUWMA-GEARHART, Ph.D.

 

SHARON BRENNAN

 

SHARON BRENNAN, Ed.D., University of Kentucky

Dr. Brennan (vita in Word) has served as Director of Field Experiences for the College of Education since 1984. She joined the faculty in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction in 1993. Dr. Brennan received Ed.D. and M.A. degrees from the University of Kentucky and a B.S. degree from Framingham State College, Framingham, MA. Her areas of academic interest and expertise include: teacher assessment, clinical supervision, professional development and curricular issues in elementary education. (in the news)

ELINOR BROWN

 

ELINOR BROWN, Ph.D., University of Akron

Dr. Brown (vita in PDF ) holds an M.B.A. from Cleveland State University, M.A. in multicultural education and M.S. in secondary education from the University of Akron, and a B.B.A. from Cleveland State University. Dr. Brown has taught undergraduate and graduate level courses in teacher education, cultural diversity, and professional development at Cleveland State University, John Carroll University, and the University of Akron. Her research and academic interests include cultural diversity pedagogy, teacher preparation, and school/university/community collaboration. (news story)

Les Burns

 

LESLIE DAVID BURNS, Ph.D., Michigan State University

Dr. Burns (vita in Word) joined the faculty in 2005 as an assistant professor of literacy. He began his career as a high school English language arts teacher in Kansas, and holds a BA in English Literature from Washburn University of Topeka, Kansas, an MA in Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Kansas, and a Ph.D. in Curriculum, Teaching, and Educational Policy from Michigan State University. Dr. Burns’s research interests include pre-service English education, teacher education curriculum and policy, teacher identity, adolescent literacy and literacy policy, cultural theories, critical discourse analysis, and the application of research and theory from the New Literacy Studies. Dr. Burns is chair of the English education program faculty.

Susan Cantrell

SUSAN CANTRELL, Ed.D. University of Kentucky

Dr. Cantrell (vita in Word) joined the faculty in 2003 as an assistant professor. She is the executive director of the Collaborative Center for Literacy Development. She earned her BA at UK, her MA at Georgetown College, and her EdD at UK. Dr. Cantrell has taught at Northern Kentucky University and Georgetown College before joining CCLD in 2003. Her interest areas focus on specific aspects found within lifelong literacy development. Associate member of the Graduate Faculty. (news story)

JANINE CLINE

 

JANINE CLINE, Staff Support Associate II

 

 

Mark Dressman

 

MARK DRESSMAN, Ph. D., University of Texas at Austin

Dr. Dressman (vita in Word) joined the faculty in 2008. He has taught at New Mexico State University, the University of Houston, and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and was a middle and high school teacher of English and social studies for more than ten years in the Peace Corps (Morocco), on the Navajo Reservation, and in Cincinnati. Dr. Dressman graduated from Thomas More College in Crestview Hills, KY, in 1977 and completed his M.A. at Teachers College, Columbia University in 1981. Dr. Dressman studies the rhetoric of educational writing and conducts ethnographic studies of school literacy and of transcultural, cross-national dialogue. He is the author of Using Social Theory in Educational Research (Routledge, 2008) and of recent articles in Reading Research Quarterly, English Education (forthcoming), and Ethnography.  He is also co-editor of Research in the Teaching of English.

 

LAURIE HENRY

 

LAURIE HENRY, Ph.D., University of Connecticut

Dr. Henry (vita in Word) joined the faculty in 2007 as an assistant professor of early adolescent literacy. She came to Lexington from Connecticut where she began her career as a middle school teacher. Dr. Henry has a B.S. in special education and an M.A. in education from the University of Connecticut where she also earned a Ph.D. in Cognition and Instruction with an emphasis on literacy and technology. Dr. Henry has served on the advisory board with readwritethink.org for the International Reading Association since 2003. Her research interests include the new literacies of online reading comprehension at the middle school level and social equity issues related to the digital divide..

Kathy Heineman

 

KATHY HEINEMAN, Administrative Support Associate I

LINDA S. LEVSTIK

 

LINDA S. LEVSTIK, Ph.D., The Ohio State University

Dr. Linda S. Levstik (vita in Word) joined the faculty in 1982. She came to Lexington from Columbus, Ohio where she was a consultant for teacher education program assessment with the Ohio Department of Education. Dr. Levstik holds a B.S. from Capital University in Columbus, Ohio, and taught in public and private schools in Ohio. She holds the M.S. degree from The Ohio State University. Her areas of academic interest and expertise include the development of historical thinking, classroom contexts for teaching history and the social studies, the development of inquiry skills in elementary age children, and children's literature.

XIN MA

XIN MA, Ph.D., University of British Columbia

Dr. Xin Ma (vita in PDF) joined the faculty in 2003. He holds a Masters in Mathematics Education from the University of British Columbia in Canada and a doctorate in Curriculum and Instruction from the same institution. Dr. Ma taught mathematics education and education statistics at St. Francis Xavier University and the University of Alberta in Canada before coming to the University of Kentucky. He became a Fellow of the ( U.S.) National Academy of Education in 2001 and received the Early Career Contribution Award from the Committee for Scholars of Color in Education, American Educational Research Association in 2003. Dr. Ma's research interests include mathematics education, school effectiveness, policy research, and advanced quantitative methods.

JOAN M. MAZUR

 

JOAN M. MAZUR, Ph.D., Cornell University

Dr. Joan Mazur (vita in Word) joined the faculty in 1993 as an assistant professor in the Instructional Systems Design program. She had worked for six years at the Interactive Multimedia Group at Cornell University while pursuing her graduate degrees. Dr. Mazur holds a Masters in Educational Philosophy from Cornell and a doctorate in Curriculum and Instruction from that same institution. After obtaining her B.A. in English from SUNY Geneseo in upstate New York she taught secondary English at several rural and inner city schools. Dr. Mazur's current research interests focus on interface designand the use of interactive multimedia to support learning, research, and teacher professionalism in a variety of instructional contexts.

Btty McCann BETTY McCANN, Staff Support Associate II

NANYCE McCRARY

 

NANCYE E. McCRARY, Ed.D., University of Kentucky

Dr. McCrary (vita in Word) joined the faculty in 2005 as an assistant professor in elementary social studies and humanities education in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. Most recently, she served as an assistant research professor for the Commonwealth Center for Instructional Technology and Learning where her focus has been evaluating an interactive web-based instructional support system for K-12 teachers in Kentucky. Dr. McCrary has also served as an assistant professor in art education at the University of Kentucky and at Brenau University in Gainesville, GA.. She has a B. S. and M. S. in education from the University of Tennessee and over twenty years teaching experience in public and private K-12 schools. In addition to teaching, Dr. McCrary designed and directed a family-centered treatment program for emotionally and behaviorally challenged youth at St. Mary's Medical Center in Knoxville, TN., served as a consultant for the San Francisco Redevelopment Board on issues of accessibility for the Yerba Buena Children's Museum, and as an evaluator for the Southern Association of Schools and Colleges.

REBECCA MCNALL

 

REBECCA McNALL KRALL, Ph.D., University of Virginia

Dr. Rebecca McNall Krall (vita in PDF) joined the faculty in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction in fall 2003. Dr. McNall Krall came to the university after completing her doctoral degree in science education at the University of Virginia. She also holds a B.A. in elementary education from Virginia Tech and a M.Ed. in science education from the University of Virginia. She served as a classroom teacher in grades 6 – 8 for seven years in Virginia public schools prior to pursuing her graduate degrees. Dr. McNall Krall’s current research interests include examining strategies for preparing preservice science teachers to effectively use educational technology in science instruction, preparing preservice teachers to teach the nature of science, and exploring ways to use educational technology tools to support inquiry learning in elementary science.

Margaret Mohr

 

MARGARET MOHR, Ph. D., Texas A&M University

Dr. Mohr (vita in PDF) joined the faculty in 2006 as an assistant professor of mathematics education. She began her career as a junior high, high school, community college, and college mathematics instructor in Kansas. She holds a BSEd in Mathematics from Pittsburg State University of Pittsburg, Kansas, a MS in Mathematics also from Pittsburg State University, and a Ph.D. in Curriculum and Instruction from Texas A&M University. Dr. Mohr's research interests include pre-service teacher Mathematics Education, mathematics knowledge for teaching, and assessment. Dr. Mohr is chair of the mathematics education program faculty.

photo

KRISTEN PERRY, Ph.D., MIchigan State University

Dr. Perry (vita in PDF) joined the faculty in 2007 as an assistant professor of elementary literacy. She earned a BA in English from Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, and a Ph.D. in Learning, Technology & Culture, with a specialization in Literacy, from Michigan State University. Dr. Perry began her career teaching in multi-age elementary classrooms in Denver, Colorado, and also served for two years in the Peace Corps in Lesotho in southern Africa. Her research interests include literacy as a socio-cultural practice, multiple literacies, family and community literacy, and African refugee communities.

ROSETTA F. SANDIDGE,

 

ROSETTA F. SANDIDGE, Ed.D., University of Kentucky

Dr. Sandidge (vita in PDF) is serving as interim dean for the 2008-2009 academic year. In addition, she continues to serve as associate dean for academic and student services. She holds a bachelor’s degree in vocational home economics education from Texas Christian University and an M.S. and Ed.D. in vocational education from the University of Kentucky. Dr. Sandidge is an associate professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. Her areas of academic interest and research include teacher assessment, teacher induction, classroom management, and gender equity. She began her career at the college in 1983.

MARY C. SHAKE

 

MARY C. SHAKE, Ed.D., SUNY Albany

Dr. Shake (vita in PDF) joined the faculty in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction in the Fall, 1985, having spent one year as Academic Staff at the University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh. Dr. Shake holds a M.S. degree in Reading from the State University of New York at Albany, and a B.S. degree in Elementary Education and Home Economics from St. Joseph College in Connecticut. Dr. Shake's areas of academic interest include classroom literacy instruction, education reform, and teacher preparation for diverse classrooms. Dr. Shake is Chairperson and Director of Graduate Studies for the department. She is also chair of two program faculties: elementary education and reading and writing.

DOUGLAS C. SMITH

 

DOUGLAS C. SMITH, Ph.D., Arizona State University

Dr. Smith (vita in PDF) joined our faculty in 1987. His primary assignment is in our Instructional Systems Design program where he teaches instructional computing and electronic authoring. His research interests include the roles of education technologists, gender equity, and computer based instruction. Dr. Smith also coordinates the business content core for the master's with initial certification program. Dr. Smith is chair of the business and marketing education program faculty.

FELICIA CUMINGS SMITH

 

FELICIA CUMINGS SMITH, M.Ed., University of Louisville

Ms. Smith joined the faculty in 2005 as a lecturer in reading and literacy. She holds a B.A. degree in Elementary Education with a master’s in Reading. She is enrolled in the doctoral program at UK in Curriculum and Instruction. Ms. Smith is the Associate Director of the Collaborative Center for Literacy Development, where she provides oversight for various professional development initiatives. Ms. Cumings Smith worked at the Kentucky Department of Education in the Office of Teaching and Learning as the Elementary Reading Consultant providing oversight for an $89 million grant – Kentucky Reading First. Her interests are in reading and literacy, literacy policy, literacy professional development, cultural diversity pedagogy, and special education.

GERRY SWAN

 

GERRY SWAN, Ph.D., University of Virginia, Charlottesville

Dr. Swan (vita in PDF) joined the faculty in 2007 as an assistant professor of STEM Education. He began his career with teaching experience at a boarding school in New Hampshire. Teaching in a one-to-one computing environment sparked his interest in the use of technology in education. He holds a BS in Mechanical Engineering from Clemson University and a Ph.D. in Instructional Technology from the University of Virginia. Dr. Swan's research interests include use of interactive media with instruction and computer managed instruction/research.

KATHLEEN O. SWAN

 

KATHLEEN OWINGS SWAN, Ph.D., University of Virginia, Charlottesville

Dr. Swan (vita in Word) joined the faculty in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction in the fall 2004. Dr. Swan came to the university after completing her doctoral degree in social studies education at the University of Virginia. She also holds a B.S. in economics from Mount Saint Mary's College in Maryland and an M.A.T. in social studies education from Johns Hopkins University. She served as a classroom teacher in grades 6-12 for seven years in public, private and International schools prior to pursuing her doctoral degree. Dr. Swan's current research interests include examining strategies for training pre-service and in-service social studies teachers to effectively use educational technology in social studies instruction. Dr. Swan is chair of the social studies program faculty.


MARY ANN VIMONT

 

MARY ANN VIMONT, M.Ed., University of Kentucky

Mary Ann Vimont (vita in PDF) joined the faculty in 1980 and is an Associate Professor in the College of Education and Director of the Economic Education Center sponsored by the Kentucky Council at the University of Kentucky. She is also Director of Student Activities, Alumni, Community Affairs & Public Relations for the College. Ms. Vimont's background is in teacher training and curriculum development. She has studied and visited many educational programs in Europe and Asia. Ms. Vimont worked several summers in a Teacher Center in Great Britain and is a charter member of the International Association for the Awareness of Economics for Young Children.



Emeritus Faculty and Retired Staff

RONALD K. ATWOOD

 

RONALD K. ATWOOD, Ed. D., Florida State University

Dr. Atwood (vita in Word) joined the faculty in 1966. He holds a B.S. and M.A. degree from Murray State, an M.S. from New Mexico Highlands and the Ed.D. from Florida State. His specialization is science education, elementary and middle school levels. Conceptual change and alternative conceptions are Dr. Atwood's recent research interests.

DEBORAH CHANDLER

 

DEBORAH CHANDLER, Administrative Support Associate I

 

 

J. TRUMAN STEVENS

 

J. TRUMAN STEVENS, Ed.D., University of Virginia

Dr. Stevens (vita in PDF) joined the faculty in 1972 and was an associate professor of Science Education. Dr. Stevens received his B.S. from Georgetown College and his M.Ed. and Ed.D from the University of Virginia. His areas of academic interest include science teacher education (elementary, middle, and senior high schools), development and implementation of innovative methods and materials in science classrooms, science teaching and the development of reasoning (problem solving), safety in the science classroom, curriculum development, and science games and simulations.

WILLIS JOHNSON

 

WILLIS JOHNSON, Ed.D., Temple University

Dr. Johnson (vita in PDF) joined the faculty in August, 1997. A native of Richmond County, VA, raised and schooled in Philadelphia, PA, moved to Kentucky from Houston, TX in 1977. His degrees in mathematics education are from Temple University. His twenty years at Murray State University provided many opportunities to grow and to serve teachers throughout the country and world. Dr. Johnson has served in a variety of leadership roles with the Kentucky Department of Education, the Kentucky Council of Teachers of Mathematics, School Science and Mathematics Association, and systemic initiatives in both mathematics and science education grants funded by the National Science Foundation. His interests are technology applications to enhance teaching. Dr. Johnson served as the editor of Kentucky Journal for Teachers of Mathematics.


ANGENE H. WILSON

 

ANGENE H. WILSON, Ph.D., The Ohio State University

Dr. Wilson taught secondary social studies methods and supervised student teachers. Her research interests are international experience. Dr. Wilson was a Fulbright Scholar at the University College of Education, Winneba, Ghana for Spring, 1997.

Department of Curriculum and Instruction homepage

 



Updated on October 10, 2008 16:40

by the Webmaster - Content by Dr. Mary Shake
For more details, see the Department of Curriculum and Instruction.
For program information contact Dr. Mary Shake, Director of Graduate Study

Were you able to find what you were looking for?
Yes   No  
For best viewing, a current browser is recommended.
The University of Kentucky is an equal opportunity university.
Some web sites to which these materials link may not be managed by the University of Kentucky.
The university does not review, control, or take responsibility for the content of those sites.
Copyright University of Kentucky College of Education 1995 - 2008, All rights reserved