
Education
|
Editor in Chief | Editorial Board | Articles and Contributors | Graduate Award
Education is a highly active field. From teacher retention strategies to early childhood development, the study of education features a range of disciplines including psychology, sociology, history, economics, philosophy, anthropology, and political science. The multidisciplinary nature of education makes it challenging to stay informed regarding applicable areas. Moreover, much of the relevant scholarship has moved online with the most recent scholarship, research, and statistics appearing in online databases. Thus, there are consistently new discoveries, new interpretations, and new theoretical concepts to take into account. With Oxford Bibliographies in Education, students and scholars now have a reliable, selective, and authoritative guide to the best literature in the field.
Editor in Chief

Luanna H. Meyer is Professor of Education (Research) and Director of the Jessie Hetherington Center for Educational Research at Victoria University in New Zealand. She is also Emeritus Professor at Syracuse University in the U.S. and Adjunct Professor, Griffith University in Australia. After receiving her Ph.D. from Indiana University, she held faculty positions at the University of Hawai’i, the University of Minnesota, Syracuse University, and Massey University prior to her current position. At Syracuse University, she was one of the founders of the Inclusive Elementary and Special Education Teacher Education Program and she coordinated the doctoral program in special education. She also directed numerous federally funded research and development projects, including a five-year national research institute on the social relationships of children and youth with diverse abilities in the U.S. and the ten-year New York Partnership for State-wide Systems Change. In New Zealand, her research has focused on the impact of standards-based assessment on secondary student motivation and achievement; multicultural education; positive approaches to children’s challenging behaviour; assessment policy and practice in higher education; and the role of the professoriate in modern universities.
As an educational researcher and university educator, Professor Meyer’s work emphasizes evidence-based approaches for implementation in diverse educational contexts. She collaborates with school leaders, teachers, behavior specialists, and academic colleagues to validate policy and practice toward inclusive schools where all children and youth belong and feel valued. She is on the editorial board of several major international journals and is a member of the Technical Review Committee on Behavior for the National Center for Students with Disabilities who Require Intensive Interventions led by the American Institutes for Research. She has been invited to speak in eight countries and 30 U.S. states about her work, and she has published over 120 journal articles and book chapters. Her 12 books include Making Friends: The Influences of Culture and Development; Critical Issues in the Lives of People with Severe Disabilities; Behavioral Intervention: Principles, models, and Practices; The Syracuse Community-Referenced Curriculum Guide; Non-Aversive Intervention for Behavior Problems; and An Educative Approach to Behavior Problems. She is also first author of two books that are in press with Corwin for publication in 2012—The School Leader’s Guide to Restorative School Discipline and The Teacher’s Guide to Restorative Classroom Discipline.
|
FOUNDING EDITORS IN CHIEF
EDITORIAL BOARD
University of California, Los Angeles
Pennsylvania State University
Monash University
University of Ottawa
University of Colorado at Boulder
University of Colorado, Denver
Arizona State University
Indiana University
University of London
FOUNDING EDITORIAL BOARD
John Dayton
University of Georgia
Vanderbilt University
Penn State
Vanderbilt University
Eric Hilgendorf
Tennessee Department of Education
University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill
Joyce Meeuwsen
Gordon College
Brown University
Heather Zavadsky
Texas High School Project
ARTICLES AND CONTRIBUTORS
John R. Hoyle
Texas A&M
Colleen Hoy
Vanderbilt University
Cathy Smilan
University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Beverly L. Weiser
Southern Methodist University
Lee Alvoid
Southern Methodist University
Ryan S. Olson
The Kern Family Foundation
Mark D. Cannon
Vanderbilt University
John R. Thelin
University of Kentucky
Corey Bunje Bower
Vanderbilt University
Robert L. Crowson
Vanderbilt University
James C. Kaufman
California State University, San Bernadino
Saad Shawer
King Saud University
Kevin A. Gee
Brown University
James W. Guthrie
George W. Bush Presidential Center
Patrick J. Schuermann
Vanderbilt University
Kenneth K. Wong
Brown University
James W. Guthrie
George W. Bush Presidential Center
Patrick J. Schuermann
Vanderbilt University
Andrew Hargreaves
Boston College
Corrie Stone-Johnson
University at Buffalo
Kristin Kew
New Mexico State University
Joshua Polanin
Loyola University
Terri Pigott
Loyola University
Pearl Sims
Vanderbilt University
Steven Stone
Paul Manna
William and Mary University
Donald E. Heller
Penn State University
Joseph S. Renzulli
University of Connecticut
Sally M. Reis
University of Connecticut
William R. Doyle
Vanderbilt University
Patricia M. Lines
U.S. Department of Education
Scott Barry Kaufman
New York University
Stephen P. Heyneman
Vanderbilt University
jeongwoo Lee
Vanderbilt University
John Dayton
University of Georgia
Toby Linden
World Bank
Jessica Folsom
Florida State University
Jill H. Allor
Southern Methodist University
Stephanie Al Otaiba
Florida State University
Marisa Cannata
Vanderbilt University
Elizabeth C. Vozzola
St. Joseph's University
Sharon Lamb
University of Massachusetts, Boston
Richard E. Mayer
University of California, Santa Barbara
Deborah Macfarlan Enright
Vanderbilt University
Courtney L. Brown
Indiana University
Mindy Hightower King
Indiana University, Bloomington
Chad Lykins
University of Hong Kong
Dana L. Mitra
Penn State University
Sarah Anne Eckert
Notre Dame of Maryland University
Edward J. Fox
Charlotte Latin School
G. Reid Lyon
Southern Methodist University
Eric K. Hilgendorf
State of Tennessee Department of Education
Colleen Hoy
Vanderbilt University
James W. Guthrie
George W. Bush Presidential Center
Patrick J. Schuermann
Vanderbilt University
Heather Zavadsky
Texas High School Project
Jonathan M. Eckert
Wheaton College
Audrey Bartholomew
University of North Carolina, Charlotte
David W. Test
University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Jennifer Cease-Cook
University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Shelley H. Billig
RMC Research
Stephen J. Meyer
RMC Research
Peter Witham
Wisconsin University
Claire Smrekar
Vanderbilt University
Lydia Bentley
Vanderbilt University
Richard Rothstein
Economic Policy Institute
William B. Russell
University of Central Florida
Sheneka M. Williams
University of Georgia
Eric A. Houck
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Dana L. Mitra
Penn State University
Joyce L. Meeuwsen
Gordon University
Carleen Carey
Michigan State University
Dorothea Anagnostopoulos
Michigan State University
Juanita Bautista-Guerra
Michigan State University
Sakeena Everett
Michigan State University
Diana D'Amico
Brown University
Chris Zirkle
Ohio State University
Lindsey Martin
Ohio State University
FORTHCOMING ARTICLES
Fall 2012
Adult Education
Dayle Savage
College Admissions
Patricia McDonough
UCLA
Shannon Calderone
UCLA
Data-driven Decision Making
Laura Hamilton
Heather Schwartz
RAND Corporation
Development and Marketing
Eve Proper
Peabody College
Early Childhood Mathematics
Arthur Baroody
University of Illinois
David Purpura
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Erin Reid
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Veena Paliwal
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Neet Bajwa
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Historical Evolution of Higher Education
Serena Hinz
Vanderbilt
Christopher Loss
Vanderbilt University
Leadership Training
Pamela Tucker
University of Virginia
Literature Education
Laura Snyder
Measurement in Education
Charlotte Agger
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Greg Cizek
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Physical Education
Murray Mitchell
University of South Carolina
Politics of Education
Douglas Mitchell
University of California, Riverside
Professional Development
Stephanie Hirsh
Learning Forward
Joellen Killion
Learning Forward
Spring 2013
Beginning Teacher Induction
Ruth Kane
Changing Professional and Academic Identities
Celia Whitchurch
Christian Schneijderberg
Universität Kassel
Culturally Responsive Pedagogies
Susan Faircloth
Pennsylvania State University
Early Childhood Education in Australia
Marilyn Fleer
Emotional Disturbance and Behavioral Disorders
Sarup Mathur
Katie Sprouls
Arizona State University
Mixed Methods
Nancy Leech
Motivation
Matthew McCrudden
Victoria University of Wellington
Response-to-Intervention
Janette Klingner
Theories of Educational Leadership
Brendan Maxcy
GRADUATE STUDENT ARTICLE AWARD
The Oxford Bibliographies Graduate Student Article Award is an annual, invitation-only award that offers experienced doctoral candidates an opportunity to contribute to Oxford Bibliographies in Education, to draw attention to their work, and to add a peer-reviewed publication to their CVs. Invitation is by faculty nomination only. Nominations are no longer being accepted for this year’s award. Please check back soon for information about next year’s award.
|

“Graduate students are by necessity deeply and critically engaged in the literature within emerging areas of research. This knowledge puts them in an ideal position to write for Oxford Bibliographies. I am particularly excited about the potential of this award as a pathway to including articles on cutting-edge topics, and I think it is an important acknowledgement of the significant contribution graduate students routinely make to the production of new scholarship.”
--Damon Zucca, Reference and Online Publisher, Oxford University Press
|
Not finding what you are looking for?
Maintaining Oxford Bibliographies is a partnership between the publisher and the academic community, and we invite you to participate. Feel welcome to email our editorial group for more information, comments, or suggestions concerning content within Oxford Bibliographies.