Syracuse University School of Education was well represented by faculty and students—both graduate and undergraduate—at the American Educational Research Association’s 2026 Annual Meeting in Los Angeles, from April 8 to 12.
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Undergraduates Eliani Jimenez Merino ’26 and Vera Wang ’26 joined Professor George Theoharis to present “‘There’s No Way to Make it Without Your People’: Documenting the Path to Leadership for Women of Color” at AERA 2026. Syracuse appeared in sessions spanning arts-based research, counseling, curriculum studies, disability studies, educational leadership, indigenous education, instructional technology, literacy, and teacher education.
- SOE Educational Technology and Media researchers appeared across multiple AI-in-education sessions, reflecting SOE’s strength in this Signature Area of Distinction.
- SOE’s inclusive education faculty and students featured across a dozen distinct sessions, spanning symposia, paper sessions, roundtables, and posters.
- Arts Education Professor James Haywood Rolling Jr. served as Discussant at an AERA Presidential Session.
- Also taking lead roles, Professor Courtney Mauldin-Jones chaired the Arts-based Educational Research Special Interest Group (SIG) business meeting; Professor Yehyang Lee served as a SIG Officer for Cultural-Historical Research; and Professor David DeAngelis represented Syracuse in the Music Education SIG.
Read the full AERA 26 program or browse representative SOE-related paper titles below:
- Christine Elaine Ashby, Beth Myers, Julia M. White, Sara H. Petit-McClure, and Shana Lewis. “All Children Succeeding: Understanding the Inclusive Education Landscape in Uzbekistan.”
- ParKer Bryant. “Seeing the Unknown, Sensing the Possible: Unhobbling and CritQuant—A Critical, Creative Literacy Design.”
- Chelsea Bouldin. “Futuring Education Through Archival Praxis.”
- Yanbei Chen and Jing Lei. “Unpacking Social-Emotional Learning in Teacher Education: A Systematic Review.”
- Moon-Heum Cho. “Rethinking Pre-Class Modality in Flipped Learning: A Comparative Study of Textbook Reading and Instructor-Created Videos.”
- ———. “Pre-Service Teachers’ Experiences and Perspectives on Using Generative AI in Developing Teaching Materials.
- Moon-Heum Cho and Ying Chen. “Instructional Design Students’ Intention to Use AI Tools in ID Practices.”
- Alex Corbitt. “Ideating Worlds with ChatGPT: Critical Inquiries into the Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Narrative Composing.”
- ———. “Negotiating Rules, Roles, and Ideologies in Children’s Narrative Gameplay.”
- David DeAngelis and Matthew Robertson. “Master’s Degrees for Music Educators: Demographics and Disparities.”
- Alan R. Foley. “Passing for What? Disability, Delay, and the Architecture of Academic Recognition.”
- Jessica Fundalinski. “Clinical Simulations as Sites for Advancing Critical Multilingual Language Awareness.”
- Jessica Fundalinski and Amanda Kingston. “In-service Educators’ Meaning-Making and Experiences with Mindful Outdoor Engagements.”
- Julie Harnett. “‘I Felt Like a Real-Life Teacher’: Teacher Candidates Reflect on Development Through Simulations.”
- Ethan W. Jackson and Rebekah Wallis. “The Impact of Epistemic Oases within Educational Spaces on the Disability Rights Movement.”
- Ibrahim Kizil and Bong Gee Jang. “Exploring Racial Disparities in Digital Reading: A QuantCrit Study of U.S. Adolescents.”
- Bong Gee Jang. “Predictors of Self-Efficacy Among Secondary Teachers in Multicultural and Multilingual Classrooms.”
- Morgan Jacobs and Beth Myers. “The Experiences of Queer and Trans Students with Intellectual Disability within Inclusive Post Secondary Education.”
- Sultan Kilinc. “The Education of Refugee Children with Disabilities in the Turkish Context.”
- Yehyang Lee. “Excavating Borders, Envisioning Futures: Reimagining State Policy Guidance for Multilingual Learners with Disabilities.”
- ———. “Assemblages of Marginality: Exploring the Geographic and Structural Displacement of Homeless Students with Disabilities.”
- Teukie Martin and Nikkia D. Borowski. “Disability Justice Dreams and Loving Corrections of IPSE.”
- Courtney Mauldin-Jones. “Inventing New Worlds: Channeling Black Girl Aesthetic and Imagination.”
- ———. “Facilitating Space for Creative Resistance Through Literacy and Arts-based Methods.”
- ———. “Black Women’s Activism and Leadership as the Blueprint for Visioning Black Girl Futures.”
- Beth Myers, Nikkia D. Borowski, Cam Michael Powell, Rebekah Wallis, and Ethan W. Jackson. “Centering Students with Intellectual Disability in IPSE Research: A Secondary Analysis.”
- Brian Odiwuor. “Knowledge of Context and Culture: Advancing Teacher Knowledge to Transform Mathematics for All.”
- Sara H. Petit-McClure. “Teacher Competencies to Improve Experiences and Outcomes for Diverse Learners.”
- Sara H. Petit-McClure, Ethan W Jackson, Christine Elaine Ashby, Beth Myers. “Living Inclusion: Experiences in Italy from an Intentionally Inclusive Study Abroad Program.”
- Cam Michael Powell, Sara H. Petit-McClure, Teukie Martin, and Christine Elaine Ashby. “A Framework for Inclusion: Values Behind 50 Years of Practice.”
- George Theoharis. “Increasingly Diverse Schools: Coming from Our Histories Toward Leading in a Time of DEI Backlash.”
- George Theoharis, Christine Elaine Ashby, Sean Drake, Lauren Ashby, and ParKer Bryant. “‘It’s Not Going to Stop … So We Just Gotta Go Out and Play”: High School Student-Athletes of Color Experiences with Racism and High School Athletics.”
- George Theoharis, Eliani Jimenez Merino, and Vera Wang. “‘There’s No Way to Make it Without Your People’: Documenting the Path to Leadership for Women of Color.”
- Rebekah Wallis and Christine Elaine Ashby. “Learning Through Composite Narratives: Inclusive Teaching Experiences for Teacher Education Programs.”
- Julia M. White, Christine Elaine Ashby, Rebekah Wallis, Ethan W Jackson, and Cam Michael Powell. “The Rhetorics of (Re)Branding: A Historical and Discourse Analysis of the Inclusion/Special Education Debate.”
- Julia M. White, Qiu Wang, Christine Elaine Ashby, Rebekah Wallis, and Yehyang Lee. “A Tale of Two States: Educational Service Agencies, Access, and Outcomes for Students With Disabilities.”
- Louise C. Wilkinson and Sunny Li. “Exploring Early Career Teachers’ Beliefs and Practices Around Academic Language for English Learner Students.”
