Wednesday, March 30, 2022 | 1pm to 2pm
About this Event
Professor Carlton Fong (Texas State Univ) will discuss evidence-based strategies to maximize student confidence, learning, and belonging.
About this event
During the COVID-19 pandemic, rapid shifts in students’ lives profoundly affected their well-being, mental health, and academic motivation. Research shows that students were most worried about staying motivated to do their academic work during the pandemic. Grounded by meta-analytic research in educational psychology, this talk will unpack ways to think about student motivation, particularly for those experiencing difficult transitions. It will emphasize evidence-based strategies for a post-pandemic reality that maximizes motivation by helping students build confidence, find value in learning, seek help, and feel like they belong.
REGISTER HERE.
This event is hosted by the MIT Teaching + Learning Lab.
About the Speaker
Dr. Carlton J. Fong is an assistant professor in the Graduate Program in Developmental Education and the Department of Curriculum and Instruction at Texas State University. As a scholar-practitioner at the intersection of educational psychology and higher education, Dr. Fong uses a sociocultural lens to study motivational factors influencing postsecondary student engagement, achievement, and persistence. He is also an expert in meta-analysis and research synthesis and is currently the chair of the Motivation in Education Special Interest Group of the American Educational Research Association (AERA). In 2021, he was recognized as an Association for Psychological Science Rising Star and an AERA Deeper Learning Fellow.
(Seedlings photo by Julian Paolo Dayag)