| Full-Time Faculty
Erin E. Seaton
Lecturer in School Psychology
- Ed.D. Harvard Graduate School of Education
- Ed.M. Harvard Graduate School of Education
- B.A. Earlham College
It was Erin E. Seaton's studies at Earlham College that first inspired her
interest in psychological health and development. At Earlham, Erin
explored adolescent coming of age stories. Throughout her scholarship
she has held fast to her interest in the nature and meaning of
narratives with a particular emphasis on the ways in which stories
about race, class, gender, sexuality, and education shape identity
formation. Erin earned an Ed.M. and Ed.D. in Human Development and
Psychology from Harvard University Graduate School of Education, where
she studied adolescents' narratives of identity and development. For
her thesis research with rural youth she was awarded the Wellesley
Centers for Women Stone Primary Prevention Grant and AERA Rural
Education Dissertation Award. Her subsequent research and scholarship
has focused on rural and urban education, gender and development,
literacy, inequalities in education, and violence prevention in
schools. Along with her university teaching, Erin has taught in pre-K
through 8th grade settings and served as a social worker for rural
youth and families.
Erin's courses in human growth and learning for the School Psychology
program draw on educational and narrative studies to help students
explore the diversity of children's experiences and design creative
interventions strengthening collaboration between individuals,
families, schools, and communities.
Erin is a parent, an avid outdoor enthusiast and runner, a writer, an
advocate for local agriculture, a zealous chef, and (following the
tutelage of her graduate advisor) a certified chocoholic. She serves
as a volunteer for organizations committed to supporting the health
and well-being of youth and families in her local community.
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