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Group photo at the RISE Caribbean Educational Research Conference.

Group photo at the RISE Caribbean Educational Research Conference.

USF College of Education faculty make international impact participating in RISE Caribbean

Several esteemed USF College of Education faculty members have made a profound international impact by participating in the Research Initiative for Supporting Education in the Caribbean, or . This initiative, which began in 2021 when Patriann Smith, a then assistant professor in Literacy Studies at the USF College of Education, along with international partners, secured a $3.6 million grant from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), culminated in a RISE Caribbean Conference held at the USF Patel Center for Global Solutions in 2023.

The RISE Caribbean initiative, a collaborative effort involving the University of West Indies (UWI) Cave Hill, USF, and other regional and international institutions, aimed to create a central repository of education data for the Eastern Caribbean and Barbados, conduct research to inform education policies, and build capacity for research among students and educational stakeholders. It sought to foster collaborative research and strengthen the research culture through numerous mechanisms including research partnerships with practitioners, publications, and public lectures.

A significant step in achieving these goals was the Caribbean Educational Research Center (CERC), launched on the UWI Cave Hill Campus in Barbados. There, USF faculty members delivered asynchronous training courses for the CERC in 2021, followed by two summer institutes in 2022 and 2023 with research fellows in Barbados.

A transnational Cross-Cultural Research Mentorship Network (CCRMN) was also established, where over 15 research fellows and research assistants worked with seven USF faculty members on research showcased at the RISE Caribbean Conference. The USF faculty involved in this initiative included Constance Hines, James King, Robert Dedrick, Deirdre Cobb-Roberts, Eunsook Kim, Jennifer Wolgemuth, and Jolyn Blank.

“The USF faculty proved to be indispensable to the success of the RISE Caribbean initiative and to my growth and development as a scholar. The breadth and depth of knowledge that they each possessed shone through, reflecting the strength of their individual and collective intellect while also reminding me of the warmth of their hearts,” said Smith. “It was clear that their devotion, love for the research assistants and fellows, as well as care and camaraderie for me and for each other across the USF team was invaluable and that the initiative could not have made such a remarkable impact without their immense support.”

Group photo at AERA 2023 Annual Meeting.

Group photo of UWI and USF participants at the American Education Research Association 2023 annual meeting.

Several UWI Cave Hill RISE Caribbean research fellows and assistants were invited to the 2023 and 2024 American Educational Research Association (AERA) conference in Chicago and Philadelphia respectively alongside their USF faculty research mentors. There, Smith was asked by Palgrave Macmillan, a world-class publication company, to write a book about the research-practice partnership. She also collaborated with the Classroom Caffeine podcast, where faculty and fellows shared information about RISE Caribbean, further amplifying its impact.

In a culminating event, the RISE Caribbean Education Conference was hosted in 2023 from May 30 to June 1 with a keynote by esteemed professor, , University of Texas at Austin and featured presentations by Dominican American educators, Lorena & Roberto Germán of Multicultural Classroom. Researchers from the Caribbean, the United States, and the USF College of Education presented over the three-day . The USF Anchin Center helped coordinate the conference alongside Rachel and James Hatten.

“The mentorship received by research assistants and fellows over the three-year period during which they were deeply engaged in community with USF faculty via the Cross-Cultural Research Mentorship Network (CCRMN) promises to perhaps be the most instrumental avenue for continued research transformation in the Eastern Caribbean,” said Smith. “Through the skills gathered from the initiative, the emerging scholars and educators who now function as a cadre of researchers equipped to address change based on a legacy of colonization in the Caribbean region, have the capacity to train other scholars to use Caribbean epistemologies as a basis for generating research solutions to problems in the region while also advancing the goals of education as a purpose-filled and holistic mission.”

“My best takeaway from RISE was the new relationships and friendships with the UWI community,” said King, a research mentor on the RISE Caribbean initiative, and professor emeritus at the 鶹Ƶ. “I am continuing to collaborate with faculty and doctoral students [from UWI] on several research projects.”

The grant period for RISE Caribbean ended officially on March 28, 2024, but this initiative's impact will continue to live on. For more information about RISE Caribbean, please contact Patriann Smith.

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About the USF College of Education:

As the home for more than 2,200 students and 130 faculty members across three campuses, the 鶹Ƶ College of Education offers state-of-the-art teacher training and collegial graduate studies designed to empower educational leaders. Our college is nationally accredited by the Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP), and our educator preparation programs are fully approved by the Florida Department of Education.