Dissemination
NCCF
News Archive 2005
Sharon Lynn Kagan, Ed.D.
Is Guest Editor of PDK International
Sharon
Lynn Kagan,
co-director
of NCCF, together
with Vivien
Stewart, vice
president for education at the Asia Society, served as guest editors for the
latest Phi Delta Kappan International magazine, "Education In
a Global Era." (Nov. 2005 - Vol. 87 - Number 3). This special issue of PDK
features prominent thinkers discussing learning in an era of globalization, with
a particular focus on early care and education. To view the table of the contents,
click here.
Sharon Lynn Kagan, Ed.D.
Awarded the Harold W. McGraw, Jr. Prize in Education
First Woman Educator to
Receive the Nation's Top Three Education Awards
Update:
Photo of Dr. Kagan Accepting Award from Harold W. McGraw
III.
September 27, 2005 (New York,
NY) – Sharon Lynn Kagan, Ed.D., Associate Dean for
Policy and Research at Teachers College, Columbia University,
will receive the 2005 Harold W. McGraw, Jr. Prize in Education,
one of three recipients of this year's prize. This prestigious
award, to be presented tonight in New York City, is given
to leaders in education, policy, and culture, in recognition
of their outstanding contributions to their respective fields
and to society as a whole.
Dr. Kagan is the Virginia and
Leonard Marx Professor of Early Childhood and Family Policy
at Teachers College, where she co-directs the National Center
for Children and Families, a non-profit research organization.
She is also professor adjunct at the Yale Child Study Center.
Her ground-breaking work in the field of Early Care and Education
has been recognized nationally and internationally; in the
past year, Dr. Kagan has been awarded the James Bryant Conant
Award by the Education Commission of the States; the Distinguished
Service Award by the Council of Chief State School Officers;
and most recently, the Harold W. McGraw, Jr. Prize in Education.
She joins a very select number of educators who have received
these three national honors, among the highest recognitions
in education. Dr. Kagan is the first woman to receive all
three; past recipients include former U.S. Secretary of Education
Terrel Bell, former U.S. Senator Claiborne Pell, and Theodore
Sizer, Chairman Emeritus of the Coalition of Essential Schools
and professor of education at Brown University. She shares
tonight's honors with Barbara Bowman, co-founder of the Erikson
Institute, and Ellen Moir, executive director of the New
Teacher Center at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
Dr. Kagan is a frequent consultant
to the White House, Congress, the National Governor's Association,
the U.S. Department of Education and Health and Human Services,
and numerous states, foundations, corporations, and professional
associations. She currently serves on over 40 national boards
or panels, and is the past-President of the National Association
for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) and past Co-Chair
of the National Education Goals Panel on Goal One. Additionally,
she is a prolific author, having written over 200 publications
including the authorship or editorship of 12 volumes and
the guest editorship of numerous journals.
For more information, or to
schedule an interview, please contact:
Alison Hill, Administrative Associate
National Center for Children and Families
Teachers College, Columbia University
Phone: 212-678-8255
Fax: 212-678-3160
E-mail: ahill@tc.columbia.edu
Kristie
Kauerz Authors 50-State Study on Kindergarten Policies
"Full
Day Kindergarten: A Study of State Policies in the United
States," written NCCF Graduate Fellow Kristie
Kauerz has been published by the Education
Commission of the States. The study was sponsored
by Foundation
for Child Development.
SPSSI
Awards Rebecca C. Fauth Social Issues Dissertation
Prize
Rebecca
C. Fauth, NCCF research affiliate, was awarded First Prize,
Social Issues Dissertation from the Society for the Psychological
Study of Social Issues (SPSSI). Her dissertation, "Welcome to the Neighborhood? Long-Term
Impacts of Moving to Low-Poverty Neighbor- hoods on Poor
Childrens' and Adolescents' Outcomes," focused on a
seven-year follow-up of The
Yonkers Project. That project studied the effects of
the 1985 court-ordered desegregation program in Yonkers,
NY. Dr. Fauth was a graduate fellow at NCCF and is currently
based at The Work Foundation in London, U.K.
Dr.
Jeanne Brooks-Gunn Published in NHSA-Dialog: Commentary on
High/Scope
Perry Preschool Findings
NCCF
co-director Dr.
Jeanne Brooks-Gunn shares
her views on recent
findings from the
High/Scope Perry
Preschool Study,
looking at the long-term
effects of providing quality early care and education (ECE)
to at-risk children. In "Cause
for Celebration? Sustained Effects of Early Childhood Education," Dr.
Brooks-Gunn discusses the range of factors - including teacher
quality and outreach to parents - that have contributed to
High/Scope Perry's success, and its significance. The article
is published in the most recent issue of NHSA Dialog (8,
No. 1, pp. 1-4, 2005), a Research-to-Practice Journal for
the Early Intervention Field. To learn more about NHSA
Dialog, please click:
http://www.nhsa.org/publications/dialogue/index.htm
Research
Affiliate Holly Foster Awarded
by American Sociological Association
NCCF
research affiliate Holly Foster and co-author John Hagan
have received the American
Sociological Association's Mental Health Section Best
Publication Award for “S/He's a Rebel: Toward a Sequential
Stress Theory of Delinquency and Gendered Pathways to Disadvantage
in Emerging Adulthood” (Social Forces, 2003, 82:53-86).
Dr. Foster, an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Texas
A&M University, was a postdoctoral fellow at NCCF from
2002-2003. Congratulations!
NCCF
Research Team Awarded Seed Grant
NCCF Co-Director
Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, together with NCCF researchers Anne
Martin and Rebecca
Ryan, have been awarded a “seed grant” from Columbia
University's Institute for Social and Economic Research and
Policy to develop a revised coding scheme pertaining to the
Maternal Description of Child, in which mothers' open-ended
descriptions of their children are audiotaped and coded.
This “seed” money will be used to test new coding scales
and prepare training materials for coders. The research team
plans to seek funds outside the University for coding all
tapes and conducting data analysis, as part of a longer-range
effort to examine whether the association between family
structure and early child outcomes can be explained, in part,
by mothers' emotions towards their children as expressed
during the speech sample.
Kagan Receives ECS Award
for Contributions to Education
Update:
Photo of Dr. Kagan receiving the Conant Award on July 14,
2005
DENVER – Sharon Lynn
Kagan, Ed.D., a visionary leader for improving the care and
education of young children, will be recognized for her outstanding
contributions to American education on Thursday, July 14,
in Denver, CO. The James Bryant Conant Award, one of the
most prestigious awards in the education community, will
be presented to Kagan during a banquet given in her honor
by the Education Commission of the States (ECS). The Conant
award is named for ECS' co-founder.
Kagan is an associate dean
for policy at Teachers College, the graduate school of education
at Columbia University. At Teachers College, she is The Virginia
and Leonard Marx Professor of Early Childhood and Family
Policy, and she is co-director of the National Center for
Children and Families. She has been instrumental in defining
and building early childhood care and education as a critically
important public policy field, and as the foundation for
a lifetime of education and learning. Throughout her career,
she has coupled research and policy to increase public understanding
of, and investment in, programs and services that support
young children and their families.
“Dr. Kagan is a highly
valued advisor and contributor to ECS, and I am delighted
she is receiving the recognition she so deserves,” said
ECS president Piedad Robertson. “Her pioneering efforts
to strengthen and improve child care and early learning in
America will have a lasting influence on state education
policy and the educational development of our nation's children.”
In the early 1990s, as co-chairman
of the National Education Goals Panel on Goal One (“All
children in America will start school ready to learn”),
Kagan helped to concept-tualize a comprehensive definition
of “school readiness,” encompassing a broad range
of abilities, skills and supports that young children need
to be ready to succeed in school and in life. Kagan's work
helped to integrate research in developmental psychology,
physiology, literacy and social-emotional development.
In addition, Kagan, more than
any other person, has defined what a system of early childhood
education should include. Her work has contributed to bringing
together diverse stakeholders in the early childhood field – child
care, Head Start, school-based prekindergarten and family
child care and support. It also has helped put early childhood
education on a par with K-12 and postsecondary education
in terms of requiring a foundation of high-quality services,
including finance structures, governance, teacher quality,
leadership and standards.
More recently, her work has
focused on defining how standards and accountability systems
can be used in early childhood settings – both nationally
and internationally – to better understand what young
children should know and be able to do; to help programs
improve their services; and to hold policymakers accountable
for ensuring every child and family is supported and nurtured.
Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee,
2004-06 ECS Chairman, will present the award to Kagan as
part of the 2005 ECS National Forum on Education Policy,
to be held in July 12-15 in Denver. The forum will feature
sessions on topics ranging from redesigning high schools
to strengthening workforce development. Speakers and participants
include governors, legislators, state and district superintendents,
education researchers, higher education officials, and business
and philanthropic leaders.
For more information on the
Forum, see http://www.ecs.org/nf2005 ,
or contact: Cathy Walker, ECS: 303-299-3609; e-mail: cwalker@ecs.org,
or
Alison Hill, NCCF: 212-678-8255 or ahill@tc.columbia.edu
Jeanne
Brooks-Gunn Presented with Public Policy Award
NCCF
Co-Director Jeanne Brooks-Gunn,
Ph.D., was presented
with the Distinguished Contributions to the Public Policy
for Children Award by the Society for Research in Child Development
(SRCD),
during its 2005 conference in Atlanta, GA
"Evaluations to Watch" Published
by The Harvard Family Research Project
How can videotaping parent-child
interactions at home help Head Start researchers evaluate
the program's effectiveness? In Evaluations
to Watch, NCCF's Rebecca Ryan, Christy Brady-Smith,
and Jeanne Brooks-Gunn describe the use of videotapes in
the national evaluation of Early Head Start. (Published in Evaluation
Exchange, part of the Harvard
Family Research Project.)
Sharon
Lynn Kagan Appointed Director of the Office of Policy Development
and Education and Associate Dean for Policy At Teachers
College, Columbia University
Sharon Lynn
Kagan, Ed.D., Virginia and Leonard Marx Professor of
Early Childhood and Family Policy at Teachers College, was
named Director of the Office of Policy and Research, and
Associate Dean for Policy at TC. The primary responsibilities
of this new Office at the College will be research generation,
policy recommendation and dissemination, and colleague mentoring
activities. Announcing this appointment, TC Dean Darlyne
Bailey stated, ”Professor Kagan is uniquely positioned
to undertake this role, in large part because of her continued
work as Co-Director (with Professor Jeanne Brooks-Gunn) of
the National Center for Children and Families, through which
the impact of her research and policy activities have been
recognized nationally and internationally.”
|