- Mary McCaslin
University of Arizona E-mail Author MARY MCCASLIN is a professor of educational psychology at the University of Arizona. Her scholarship focuses on the relationships among cultural, social, and personal sources of influence that coregulate student adaptive learning, motivational dynamics, and emergent identity. Her recent publications are “Co-Regulation of Student Motivation and Emergent Identity” in Educational Psychologist (in press), and “Co-Regulation of Opportunity, Activity, and Identity in Student Motivation: Elaborations on Vygotskian Themes” in S. M. McInerney and S. Van Etten (Eds.), Big Theories Revisited: Research on Sociocultural Influences on Motivation and Learning(Information Age, 2004).
- Thomas Good
University of Arizona THOMAS L. GOOD is the Editor of the Elementary School Journal and is the head of the Educational Psychology Department at the University of Arizona. His research interests include the study of teacher-student communication in classrooms as it unfolds in both the formal and informal curriculum. Recent publications are, with coauthors T. L. Good, S. Nichols, J. Zhang, C. R. H. Wiley, A. R. Bozack, et al., “Comprehensive School Reform: An Observational Study of Teaching in Grades 3 Through 5” in Elementary School Journal (2006); and, with coauthors T. L. Good, M. McCaslin, H. Y. Tsang, J. Zhang, C. R. H. Wiley, A. R. Bozack, et al., “How Well Do 1st-Year Teachers Teach: Does Type of Preparation Make a Difference?” in Journal of Teacher Education (2006).
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