
& Performance Research Center. (Photo by Shelly Hanks,
WSU Photo Services)
“The ongoing national debate over the No Child Left Behind Act – and changes in standardized testing here in Washington – spotlight the importance of making sure that tests are fair and educational programs are effective,” said professor Mike Trevisan. “Educational psychology is seeing a major renaissance.”
Trevisan co-directs the Learning & Performance Research Center (LPRC) with associate professor Brian French. The center is part of the WSU College of Education’s educational psychology program, which the university identified in 2008 as an area for “growth and investment.”
“Besides creating our own substantive teams, we will work with other organizations to improve the quality of education and its assessment,” Trevisan said.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture, developing a national tractor safety curriculum, program and certification exam process to reduce injuries among young farm workers;
The Institute of Educational Sciences, examining an intervention in elementary schools to increase science achievement and science reasoning skills;
The National Science Foundation (NSF), evaluating a project to bring science to Latino families in the Yakima Valley with Spanish-language mobile science lessons, and researching ways to retain students in engineering programs;
“State and federal educational departments, school districts and K-20 educators have a renewed interest in programs that optimize the learning potential of students,” Trevisan said.
Involving grad students
One specialty of the center is evaluating innovative programs in curriculum development and student retention. The co-directors and their 10 graduate students are working with the NSF on retaining students in engineering programs. One of their studies looks at the impact of infusing design work into all four undergraduate years.
“We involve our graduate students in a high level of work in a setting where they work closely with faculty,” French said. He noted that recent doctoral graduates have gone on to a wide variety of careers, ranging from researchers at large school districts, to training evaluators at national companies, to holding university faculty positions.
“This is life-fulfilling work.”
For more information, go to https://education.wsu.edu/research/LPRC/.