2015 - 2016 Academic Year Fellows

Jalisha Jenifer (Braxton)

 

Jalisha is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow and Adjunct Assistant Professor at Columbia University. Jalisha graduated the Department of Psychology in March 2021. Jalisha obtained a degree with honors from Princeton University in 2016 with a B.A. in Psychology and a certificate in Neuroscience. While at Princeton, Jalisha worked as a research assistant in the Human Working Memory Lab of Dr. Andrew Conway. Additionally, Jalisha has served as a research assistant in the Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics branch of Cohen Children’s Medical Center in New York and as an analytics contractor for the Delaware Department of Education.

Jalisha is studying the role of metacognition in math education, math learning, how domain-specific attitudes and beliefs influence academic behaviors and outcomes. She serves as the lead researcher on the Math Anxiety & Study Strategies Project. Jalisha’s dissertation title is “Calculated Avoidance: The Role of Effort-Based Valuations in the Relation Between Math Anxiety & Math Avoidance”.

David Knight

 

David graduated from the Political Science Department in 2022. He received a bachelor’s degree in history from Dartmouth College, trained as a teacher at Stanford University, and began his research career as a master’s student at Harvard University. Before coming to Chicago, David was also a certified high school teacher in the city of Boston. Additionally, David holds fellowships from the Ford Foundation, the Institute of Education Sciences, and the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program.

David’s research interests are civic and political learning; transitions to adulthood; and urban education. More specifically, he has investigated changing understandings of citizenship in the United States with regard to race, ethnicity, and immigration; how social policies affect the political engagement and incorporation of historically marginalized groups; the sources and measurement of school disadvantage; and the political economy of urban education.

Jennifer Lu

 

Jenny is currently a Post-Doctoral Researcher at UC-Berkeley. Jenny Lu graduated from the Department of Psychology in 2021 and obtained a bachelor’s degree from Wellesley College in 2012. Since graduating, she has worked as a Susan Rappaport Knafel ’52 Research Fellow at University College London and as a Fulbright English teaching assistant at a bilingual German/ German Sign Language school in Hamburg, Germany.

Jenny is interested in the interplay of language and gesture in signed and spoken languages and how language and gesture predict learning in signing and speaking children.  Furthermore, she hopes to pursue translational solutions to the most pressing issues in education within deaf and hearing communities. Jenny’s dissertation was titled: “Emerging deictic systems shaped by language, modality, and social interaction”.