Dr. Nicole Patton-Terry

Dr. Nicole Patton-Terry
Stem Field
School of Teacher Education
Title of Research
University Research Partnerships to Reduce Educational Disparity in College Towns
Description of Research Area

The Institutional Challenge Grant aims to address educational disparities and extend ReadUP, an existing research-practice partnership between the Florida Center for Reading Research and Leon County Schools (LCS) that has already informed programming and instruction. Through this project, partnership activities will extend to include another school district: Florida A&M University Developmental Research School (FAMUDRS). Together, partners will use the award to build capacity within the participating districts to generate and use research to reduce disparities in student achievement and school success. Partners will also use the award encourage institutional changes at both Florida State University (FSU) and Florida A&M University (FAMU). For example, programming will be developed for mid-career faculty at both universities to improve their capacity to participate in research-practice partnerships. Three faculty fellows will also generate new projects in areas prioritized by the districts. In addition, FSU will develop a competitive award program to incentivize faculty to work with students to develop research activities within existing service-learning programs provided by the Center for Leadership and Social Change. FAMU’s College of Education will also develop structures that support faculty in conducting research that is beneficial for FAMUDRS. Finally, leaders at both universities will work with partners from the National Network of Education Research-Practice Partnerships to create resources to build faculty and university capacity related to research-practice partnerships and to highlight successful research-practice partnership projects. Ultimately, the team will develop a toolkit and framework to help other public research universities, including predominantly White institutions (PWIs) and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), promote research-practice partnerships as a strategy for engaging in public impact research to address disparities in their local communities that also supports faculty advancement, student development, and research productivity.

Special Research & Career Skills

Hands-on mentorship on conducting community engaged scholarship within research-practice partnerships, manuscript writing, grant writing, grant management, and lab management. We will make use of an Individual Development Plan for goal setting and hold annual evaluation meetings to assess progress toward goals.