FALL 2014 SCHEDULE: Research at the Intersection of Developmental... Date Speaker
Transcription
FALL 2014 SCHEDULE: Research at the Intersection of Developmental... Date Speaker
FALL 2014 SCHEDULE: Research at the Intersection of Developmental Science and Education Date Speaker 10/13 Fall Break: No CCHD meeting 10/20 *Cairns Capstone Lecture Jacque Eccles UC Irvine “Linking Social Contexts and Human Development” Co-sponsored by the School of Education 10/27 Tanner LeBaron Wallace University of Pittsburgh “Challenging Simplistic Exposure-Outcome Frameworks in ClassroomBased Research: Adolescents’ Perceptions and Valuing of Teacher Talk as the Source Material of Developmentally-Significant Variability Within and Between Classrooms” 11/3 April Benner University of Texas at Austin "The Role of Schools in Adolescents’ Well-being: Unpacking PersonContext Interactions” 11/10 Adam Gamoran WT Grant Foundation “Inequality is the Problem: What’s Our Response?” 11/17 Lynne Vernon-Feagans UNC-Chapel Hill TBA 11/24 12/2 Tom Farmer Virginia Commonwealth University Jill Hamm UNC-Chapel Hill Seminar Title “Disability and Adaptation: The Awesome Shared Responsibility of Developmental Science and Special Education” TBA *The Cairns Capstone Lecture will take place in Graham Memorial Hall at UNC-CH. All other meetings take place in the lowerlevel CDS classroom and can be webcast to our partner institutions. If you have items to add to our newsletter, email Tristan Long at tristan_long@unc.edu. SPRING 2015 PREVIEW: Establishing a Developmental Science of Flourishing This spring, the CCHD series will look at the intersection of research on children’s resilience, thriving, and positive development to identify key themes and conceptual boundaries in the interdisciplinary study of children’s flourishing. If you have input regarding potential speakers or topics of interest, please let us know. Our committee includes Andrea Hussong (chair), Jennifer Coffman, Phil Costanzo, Jamie Hanson, Melissa Lippold, Jonathan Tudge, and Bob Whitaker. We will continue to meet on Mondays 2:00-3:30 for this series and hope to see you there. Post-Doctoral CCHD Mentor(s) Hillary Langley Andrea Hussong Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology, 2013 Jamie Hanson Ahmad Hariri Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology, 2014 Andrew Schaper Dan Bauer, Patrick Curran Ph.D. in Educational Methodology, Policy, and Leadership, 2014 University of Oregon Sarah Trinh Carolyn Halpern Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology, 2014 University of MichiganAnn Arbor Kate Norwalk Jill Hamm, Jennifer Coffman, Peter Ornstein Ph.D. in School Psychology, 2013 Pennsylvania State University Johnna Swartz Ahmad Hariri Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology, 2013 University of MichiganAnn Arbor Pre-Doctoral CCHD Mentor Vanessa Castro Amy Halbertstadt Developmental Psychology North Carolina State University Meredith Eastman Vangie Foshee Nadia Huq Gabriela Livas Stein Kelly Sheppard Carol Cheatham Lucy Sorenson Ken Dodge Nicholas Wagner Martha Cox Health Behavior, Gillings School of Global Public Health Clinical Psychology Developmental Psychology Public Policy Studies, Sanford School of Public Policy Developmental Psychology UNC-Chapel Hill University of Wisconsin-Madison UNC-Chapel Hill UNC-Greensboro UNC-Chapel Hill Duke University UNC-Chapel Hill Dr. Propper awarded two federal grants to study infant sleep Dr. Cathi Propper, Assistant Director of Training and Research at the Center for Developmental Science, received funding for two new projects on the development of sleep in infants. Her work builds on previous lab-based findings that sleep quantity, quality and problems affect overall health in infants and behavioral problems in young children. Taking this research out of the lab, Propper’s research uses innovative methods and unobtrusive technology to capture infant sleep through naturalistic observation in the home. The first study of its kind, infants will wear monitors to record their movement through the night and researchers will set up inconspicuous video recording devices to track infants’ sleep and caregiving behaviors when infants are 3 and 6 months of age. Additionally, Propper’s team will collect data on physiological indicators of infants’ abilities to “self-soothe” - a critical component of infants’ sleep. Through these methods, Propper will determine whether self-regulation during the day is associated with nighttime sleep quality in infants. For example, one of her studies seeks to understand why African American children appear to get less sleep than European American children. Propper and her research team are interested in potential racial/ethnic differences in both physiological functioning and nighttime parenting behavior which may contribute to sleep disparities. Propper is also extending this methodology to study the role of sleep, self-regulation, and parenting as related to prenatal cigarette exposure. Despite widely known health risks, recent evidence indicates up to 15% of women smoke during pregnancy. Propper is interested in better understanding how prenatal cigarette exposure affects infant emotion, cognition, and behavior over the first year of life. To do this, her team will follow women through their pregnancies and over the first 9 months of their child’s life. Proper’s work has provided rich training opportunities for CDS-affiliated students. Recently, graduate students in UNC-CH’s Developmental Psychology program, Nick Wagner (CCHD pre-doc) and Marie Camerota, received a grant from the Center of Regulatory Research on Tobacco Control to include a focus on mothers’ ecigarette use during pregnancy within Propper’s studies. They will examine, for the first time, e-cigarette use during pregnancy and differences in how much nicotine is delivered to the fetus from e-cigarettes versus traditional cigarettes. This trio of studies will provide critical information about how prenatal experience, infant’s physiology, and parenting behaviors contribute to infants’ sleep over the first year of life. In the long term, Propper’ work will provide a basis for interventions to improve infant health outcomes. We entered the fall with a burst of activity. Here are a few highlights. In addition to a large entering class of fellows, we welcomed Dr. Patricio Cumsille who is spending a semester leave from Pontifical Catholic University in Santiago, Chile with Duke University researchers and the Center for Developmental Science. In addition, Dr. Noa Gueron-Sela is visiting the Center on a two year postdoctoral fellowship to support international study away from her home in Israel. Look for opportunities to interact with these scholars around consortium and other upcoming activities. Thanks to Jennifer Coffman, Cathi Propper, Mike Shanahan, and Amy Briceno for their incredible efforts in submitting the NICHD T32 renewal for the CCHD training program over the summer. This proposal goes to review in November and Council in early spring. Because we are unsure of our funding for next year, recruitment of new postdoctoral fellows will be delayed this year. We will keep you informed as we know more. As you may have seen in the newspaper headlines, Centers and Institutes at UNC-CH have come under increasing scrutiny in recent months. In response, we have been asked to provide data that supports our mission and impact in a variety of ways. Next year, the CDS will undergo formal review from the university. We will take this year to collect data in preparation for this process. We appreciate your cooperation in advance. We plan to offer a half-day training event on Integrative Data Analysis to CDS faculty and fellows. This methodology provides a framework for conducting pooled data analysis on item-level data even when measurement across contributing studies varies. Look for an announcement and registration for the event soon. As always, we look forward to hearing from you about ways in with the Center can support your efforts and I look forward to seeing you in Monday Consortium.