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Faculty Associates

Meet the Director

Carey Borkoski
Carey Borkoski, Ed.D. Program Director for the Education Leadership Programs, Associate Professor

Carey is the Program Director for the Education Leadership Programs and Associate Professor in the SOE’s Department of Education Specialties where she teaches and advises students in the Master of Education Leadership and the new Executive Leadership programs. Carey’s expertise and experience in student onboarding, coaching, and identity development align well with Loyola’s mission of educating the whole person and will contribute to SOE’s leadership development degrees. Her research publications and projects sit at the intersection of belonging, educating the whole person, leadership, and learning. Carey has published scholarship on best practices for online learning including cultivating community, connections, and belonging. She has written about faculty identity development, well-being, and the role of value congruence in cultivating inclusive and welcoming spaces for faculty and students. Most recently, Carey published her first book about noticing, naming, and navigating personal and professional transitions. Along with her research team, Dr. Borkoski is currently using data from her podcast to explore the many faces of belonging in schools, leadership, and during a global pandemic. Integrating Loyola’s core values and Carey’s expertise represents a tremendous opportunity to reimagine our definition of and approach to education leadership. Her approach integrates current scholarship, coaching strategies, and teaching opportunities to effectively support our diverse and talented students. Moreover, Dr. Borkoski’s training as a research methodologist will contribute to SOE’s ability to strengthen our scholarship, cultivate research collaborations among our Loyola faculty and programs, and build out the Center’s program evaluation projects and offerings.

A selfie of Wendy against a green wall.
Wendy Chia-Smith, Ph.D. Research Associate

Dr. Yun-Dih (Wendy) Chia-Smith is an instructor in the Department of Teacher Education, where she has been teaching since 2012. Dr. Chia-Smith received her B.S. in Psychology from National Chengchi University, Taiwan in 1991, and earned her M.S. and Ph.D. in Educational Psychology from the State University of New York at Albany in 2004.  She taught at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis from 2007-2012. Dr. Chia-Smith’s research interests span from educational psychology, child development , science of learning, sport psychology and coach education. Her recent study on “The developmental psychobiosocial states on competitive badminton players” was rewarded a research grant from Badminton World Federation in 2017.

Kristina Collins headshot with Loyola evergreen campus in the back
Kristina Collins Co-Director of Literacy Education Programs, Associate Clinical Professor, Division Director of Literacy Loyola Clinical Center
Stephanie Flores-Koulish
Stephanie Flores-Koulish, Ph.D. Director of Curriculum and Instruction for Social Justice, Professor, Faculty Director of Community-Engaged Learning and Scholarship (CELS)

Stephanie Flores-Koulish is Professor and Program Director of Curriculum and Instruction for Social Justice. She is also the Faculty Director of Community-Engaged  Learning and Scholarship (CELS). Her primary area of expertise and research has been within the field of Critical Media Literacy Education. She also has conducted research on identity and adoptees, education policy and practices, and critical multicultural education. Her research provides her with many opportunities to practice engaged scholarship in and around Baltimore City. She serves on the board for the National Association for Media Literacy Education (NAMLE) and is on the executive committee for the Alliance of Adoption and Culture (ASAC). Flores-Koulish is also an alumna and mentor of the Institute for Recruitment of Teachers (IRT).

Rob Gilbert
Rob Gilbert, Ph.D. Program Director of School Counseling, Assistant Professor
Margarita Gomez
Margarita Gomez, Ph.D. Literacy Education Director, Undergraduate Teacher Education Programs, Professor of Literacy Education
Marie K. Heath, Ed.D.
Marie Heath, Ed.D. Chair of Education Specialties, Associate Professor

Dr. Marie K. Heath is the Chair of Education Specialties and Associate Professor at Loyola University Maryland. Her research interests center inquiry on young people attending high-poverty, majority-minority public schools, technology use, and civic engagement in online and offline spaces. Prior to working in higher education, Dr. Heath taught secondary social studies in Baltimore County Public Schools.

Marina smiles in a green shirt and black blazer, wearing blue framed eyeglasses with Loyola
Marina Lambrinou, Ph.D. She/her/hers Research Associate
Dr. Lambrinou is a Research Associate with the School of Education and the Center for Equity, Leadership, and Social Justice in Education (CRE) at Loyola University Maryland. A native of Cyprus, Marina situates her work at the intersections of migration policy and education and grounds her research in an interdisciplinary and critical approach to policy and education. Her research interests include immigrant youth and education, educational policy, student voice and activism, identity intersectionalities, minoritized youth in STEM, undocuactivism in the Nuevo South, interpretive and critical policy analysis, phenomenological research, LatCrit, ethnography and autoethnography centering the immigrant experience.

Marina received her doctorate in the Cultural Foundations of Education at the University of North Carolina Greensboro (UNC Greensboro) in May 2023. Her dissertation is entitled: “The United States, it’s supposed to be where dreams come true”: Rhizomatic Familias, Nested Policy Contexts and the Attendant Shaping of Undocumented and Mixed-Status Students’ Lived Experiences in North Carolina. Marina's work has been published in various esteemed journals, including Educational Policy, Equity in Education and Society, Frontiers in Education and Journal for Leader
ship, Equity, and Research.

She has also contributed chapters in books about Latinx youth and migration and has presented her work at multiple educational conferences (AESA, AERA, UCEA). She currently has two articles in publication, two articles under review, and three articles in progress.
Kristine Larson
Kristine E. Larson, Ed.D. Program Director of Special Education, Assistant Professor
Leah Saal
Leah Katherine Saal, Ph.D. Co-Director, Professor, Literacy Education Programs
Dr. Leah Katherine Saal is a Co-Director and Professor in Literacy Education. Dr. Saal’s engaged scholarly agenda focuses on the intersectionality of literacy and social justice. Her work is informed by her ongoing experiences teaching with and learning from families, adults, and communities in and out of school settings in the greater DMV region. Dr. Saal and her colleague Dr. Lisa Schoenbrodt, professor of speech-language-hearing-sciences at Loyola University Maryland, are principal investigators for several interdisciplinary engaged research projects focused on training adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities to serve as Self-Advocate Educators (SAEs) in training and advocacy environments including law enforcement and emergency medical services, among others.
Dean Joshua S. Smith, Ph.D.
Joshua S. Smith, Ph.D. Professor of Teacher Education
Joshua Smith earned his B.A. in U.S. History, M.S. in Educational Psychology and Statistics, and Ph.D. in Educational Psychology and Methodology from the University of Albany, State University of New York, where his dissertation focused on parents’ and teachers’ perceptions of behavioral problems in pre-school children. He has provided professional consulting services to the Archdiocese of Indianapolis, Indianapolis Public Schools, the Metropolitan School District of Lawrence Township (Ind.), and several other school systems and educational organizations. His awards and honors include the 2006 Indiana University Trustees’ Teaching Award and the National Advising Association’s 2002 Outstanding Advising Award. Smith has also participated in more than 50 grant-funded projects receiving more than $3,000,000 in institutional, foundation, corporation, and government support, most as principal investigator.
Karen Terrell
Karen L. Terrell, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Education

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