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The Thomas A. Mulkeen Dissertation Award

Thomas A. Mulkeen was a professor at Fordham University who was hired as a consultant and shared his expertise with faculty at 老澳门资料 as they designed and developed the EdD doctoral program in Educational Leadership. Tom was a leader within the Danforth Foundation initiative that sought to redesign and improve graduate programs in Educational Leadership. It was Tom who encouraged the doctoral program to focus the dissertation on practice-centered inquiry. Unfortunately, Tom passed away around the time that the 老澳门资料 EdD program graduated the first students in 1994. In honor of his work, the EdD program faculty established this award in his honor. This award is given to the dissertation that best exemplifies practice-centered inquiry. 

Criteria:  

The College of Education and Human Services, Department of Leadership, School Counseling, and Sport Leadership will celebrate its Educational Leadership doctorate recipients with an annual presentation of the prestigious Thomas Mulkeen Award, tentatively scheduled to take place during the COEHS Convocation. The Award is given to the graduate whose doctoral dissertation best exemplifies practice-centered inquiry. An ad-hoc group of the doctoral teaching faculty will evaluate the submitted dissertations based on the following criteria:

  1. Conceptually clear and important problem or hypotheses;
  2. Comprehensive review of applicable literature;
  3. Utilization of appropriate and methodologically sound approach; 
  4. Cogent analysis of data;
  5. Clear discussion of the importance and relevance of the study; 
  6. Scholarly writing style and appropriate documentation (citations and references in APA style);
  7. Potential of the inquiry to influence education practice.

Information about the next nomination window is shared here when it is available.

2024 Recipients of the Thomas Mulkeen Award for the Doctoral Dissertation that Best Exemplifies Practice-Centered Inquiry 

Shaneka Ferrell head shot

Dr. Shaneka Ferrell

Dr. Shaneka Ferrell serves as the Director of Programs at Cathedral Arts Project, overseeing performing and visual arts programs, where her role involves supporting teaching artists, facilitating professional development, and analyzing data to enhance program effectiveness. With a background in counselor education, she prioritizes ensuring students' voices are heard and any barriers to their holistic growth are addressed. She believes in empowering students to be active partners in shaping educational policies. Dr. Ferrell’s dissertation, How performing arts high school students experienced involvement in a Black, student-created and student-led organization focused on uplifting Black art and artists: A critical phenomenological study with implications for culturally responsive and sustaining educational practices. How participants made meaning of their experiences, she developed recommendations for schools serving racially and ethnically diverse students to implement culturally responsive and sustaining practices. Dr. Ferrell is dedicated to fostering an inclusive environment where students can thrive creatively and academically.

Headshot of Laura Mayberry

Dr. Laura Mayberry

Dr. Laura Mayberry serves as an Assistant Principal for Clay County District Schools. Prior to becoming an Assistant Principal, she spent 14 years in the classroom as an Economics teacher. The focus of her research grew out of her own experiences as a classroom teacher implementing a standard-based grading system. After leading professional development sessions and book studies on the topic, she entered 老澳门资料’s doctoral program in order to gain a deeper understanding of the impact of grading on student outcomes. Under the guidance of her advisor, Dr. Daniel Dinsmore, she completed her dissertation, Making the grade: Do teacher-created grading systems result in disparate outcomes for high school students? Her quantitative study found that students’ assigned teacher was a significant factor in determining their course grade after controlling for their standardized test scores and demographic factors, pointing to the need for more professional development around teacher grading practices.

Past Recipients of the Thomas Mulkeen Award for the Doctoral Dissertation that Best Exemplifies Practice-Centered Inquiry

2022

Dr. Laurie Hoppock

Chair: Dr. David Hoppey

Dr. Jennifer Shepard

Chair: Dr. Diane Yendol-Hoppey


2021

Dr. Lee Anderson Louy

Chair: Dr. David Hoppey

Dr. Jennifer Perkins 

Chair: Dr. Amanda Blakewood Pascale


2020

Cheryl Mobley Gonzalez

Chair: Dr. Anne Swanson

Megan McMillan 

Chair: Dr. David Hoppey


2019

Kristen Duffney

Chair: Dr. Daniel Dinsmore, Ph. D

Raine Osborne Jr. 

Chair: Dr. Daniel Dinsmore, Ph. D  


2018

Sarah Friswold-Atwood

Chair: Dr. Daniel Dinsmore, Ph. D

Anthony Mortimer

Co-Chairs: Dr. Carolyn Ali-Khan, Ph. D. and Dr. Daniel Dinsmore, Ph. D


2017

Travis Henderson

Chair: Anne K. Swanson, Ph. D


2016

Shawn Brayton

Chair: Elinor A. Scheirer, Ph.D.


2015

Mai Keisling

Chair: Christopher Janson, Ph. D.

2014

Tavy Wells

Chair: Larry G. Daniel, Ph. D.


2013

William Ganza

Chair: Katherine Kasten Ph.D.

Jevetta Stanford

Chair: Katherine Kasten Ph.D.


2012

Janie Smalley

Chair: Katherine Kasten, Ph.D.


2010   

Jeane Richards

Chair: Larry G. Daniel, Ph.D.     

Teaching for Cultural Competence: Preferred Strategies of Baccalaureate Nursing Faculty


2009

Robert Todd Parrish

Chair: Katherine Kasten, Ph.D.


2008

Angela Garcia Falconetti

Chair: Joyce T. Jones, Ph.D.

James Young

Chair: Cheryl Fountain, Ph.D.


2007

Gigi M. David

Chair, Katherine M. Kasten, Ph.D.


2006

Cynthia S. Jacobs

Chair -- Katherine M. Kasten, Ph.D.


2005

LaDonna K. Morris

Chair – Larry G. Daniel, Ph.D.

 

2004

Claribel Torres-Lugo

Co-Chairs: Warren A. Hodge, Ph.D. and Larry G. Daniel, Ph.D.

Principal’s Assessment of Florida’s Accountability Model: A Descriptive Overview of School Factors Associated with High-Stakes Accountability


2003

John A Frank

Chair: Charles M. Galloway, Ed.D.


2002

Joel Whitt Beam

Chair: Thomas S. Serwatka, Ph.D.


2001

Margo L. Martin

Chair: Thomas S. Serwatka, Ph.D.

The Connection Among Computer-Mediated Communication, Course Completion Rate, and Achievement in Relation to Distance Education and the English Composition Student


2000

Kathryn M. Krudwig

Chair: Robert J. Drummond, Ed.D.


1999

Judith B. Poppell

Chair: Katherine M. Kasten, Ph.D.

The Effect of School Desegregation on an Historically Black High School 


1998

Madelaine M. Cosgrove

Chair: Katherine M. Kasten, Ph.D.

The Impact of Professional Development School Activities on Classroom Teachers’ Sense of Efficacy and Classroom Practice


1996

Linda Rhea Hunter

Chair: Robert J. Drummond, Ed.D.


1995

Jeanne E. Borstein

Chair: Elinor A. Scheirer, Ph.D.

The Effects of Cooperative Learning on the Attitudes and Achievement of Academically Talented Secondary Students


1994

Paige V. French

Co-chairs: Charles M. Galloway, Ed.D., Katherine M. Kasten, Ph.D.

The Roles of School and Advisory Councils in School Improvement:  A Case Study in Policy Interpretation