The Education Collaboratory at Yale is proud to introduce our 2024 PSYC 493-495 Undergraduate Research Assistants, Adriana Abad Castro, Alyssa Erthum, Christian Thomas, Ava Van Straten, and Perri Hawkins. As a part of our staff spotlight series, we are highlighting their work and what brings them to our team's mission to advance the science of learning and social and emotional development.
Alyssa Erthum
First up is Alyssa Erthum. Alyssa’s role in the lab is two-fold. First, she is contributing to the SELOC Project (Social and Emotional Learning Observation Checklist). Through this research training, she will gain experience reviewing and coding qualitative data from elementary classroom observations based on a teacher’s use of social-emotional language, skills, and tasks. Secondly, she contributes to the living systematic review of universal school-based implementation of SEL in classrooms. She is excited to contribute to two projects that advance how social and emotional learning implementation in classrooms nationwide.
Alyssa’s interests lay in developmental psychology and the direct impact of intentional teaching and curriculum on cognitive and emotional growth. For her, observing how teachers shape the way students interact with their own emotions contributes to her drive to continue this research. Peripherally, she is also interested in SEL programs located in rural educational systems, where resources to support these programs may be sparse. Growing up in a small town in Nebraska, she feels called to be responsive to research that may benefit communities like the one she calls home.
What brought you to SEL, education and/or psychology?
Perri Hawkins
Next up is Perri Hawkins. Perri is contributing to Project Flourish! Her primary tasks include coding school observations and adding correct descriptors to different entries from the observations of assessment implementation by SEL specialists. She looks forward to working with the team on assessing the hereby collected data and is excited to be a part of this project!
Perri is not only a psychology major but also a proud member of the Yale Education Studies program. While she has interests in psychology that are separate from her interests in education, she primarily likes to draw from the two disciplines in tandem because they compliment each other. SEL in schools is important to her in that regard because she believes emotional education is a big stepping stone to success that most schools do not tap into for a very wide variety of reasons. Perri thinks that we hold adolescents to impossible expectations when it comes to emotional intelligence, yet there are limited attempts to support adolescents to build skills meaningfully; SEL could be the way to help them out.
What line of research do you find the most interesting/intriguing in the field right now?
Ava Van Straten
Ava has been with the lab since the fall of 2022. In her role, she has focused on the Social and Emotional Learning Observation Checklist for Elementary Schools (SELOC-E) project, specializing in reviewing and coding videos to identify effective SEL teaching pedagogies throughout the data compiled from classrooms nationwide. Additionally, she works on communicating the lab's work for educational decision-makers by designing materials that share the findings in ways accessible to teachers, students, and school leaders.
What brought you to SEL, education and/or psychology?
What line of research do you find the most interesting/intriguing in the field right now?
Christian Thomas
Christian contributes to the Education Collaboratory by helping to review rigorous, relevant, and intellectually nuanced studies that support a more complete and comprehensive articulation of the science of learning and social and emotional development. As a start to his new position, he has been focused on reviewing the past literature of the lab and literature on SEL in general.
Christian is particularly intrigued by the diverse approaches to SEL across various educational institutions. He appreciates that all schools adopt their own unique framework, influenced by factors such as community values, administrative priorities, and the specific needs of their student populations.