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Campus & Community

Ph.D. Student Looking Ahead to Unique Postdoctoral Researcher Role

Tuesday, March 19, 2024, By Diane Stirling
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accessibilityDiversity and InclusionGraduate SchoolHuman ThrivingResearch and CreativeSchool of Education

When she was a special education teacher, could see that the educational system was failing students with disabilities. To address that challenge, she decided to pursue doctoral studies in the , supported by a grant. She will graduate this spring and, in August, she鈥檒l pursue a new career as a postdoctoral associate and full-time researcher in the at the .

It is a job Baker didn鈥檛 even believe existed, but it鈥檚 the right position at the right time, she says. She鈥檒l join a lab that is situated in the 鈥渉ard sciences鈥� (STEM and biology), but whose faculty decided they wanted to change the way they teach those subjects. The lab group is now focused on researching and exploring approaches to teaching that are equitable, accessible and inclusive for all students, especially for those who identify as neurodivergent, transgender and queer, Baker says.

That鈥檚 where she came in. The lab needed a qualitative researcher as a counterpart to its quantitative focus. Since most biology lab positions involve data crunching or taking samples, Baker says she is especially excited about this unique role.

woman with a pen and book writing

Emilee Baker, a Ph.D. candidate in special education, is pursuing a unique postdoctoral research role in a biology lab.

鈥淭his job aligns with all of my vast and intersecting interests鈥攅ducation and learning, the environment and nature, qualitative research, writing, inclusive education, instruction, social justice issues, neurodiversity, disability and queerness,鈥� she says.

During her time in the School of Education, Baker took advantage of many opportunities to position herself for the career she originally expected to have: assistant professor of inclusive education. She researched the program, a preservice teacher study away experience centering inclusive education and working with diverse students in New York City. She earned certificates of advanced study in and . She completed the Graduate School鈥檚 . She was a teaching assistant and a research assistant for the School of Education鈥檚 .

When the job market didn鈥檛 support her plans, Baker鈥檚 own neurodivergent behavior鈥攁nxiety鈥攕et in, she says. During the job-hunting process, 鈥淚 was freaking out. People kept telling me I鈥檇 find the right position, though I was getting nervous. But I did end up finding what seemingly is going to be a perfect position for me.鈥�

Summer Camp

Baker鈥檚 research for her dissertation, 鈥淚nclusive Environmental Education: Learning in Relation for Disabled, Genderqueer Youth,鈥� bridges the gap between environmental and inclusive education and centers the voices of multiply marginalized youth learning in nature. As she searched for an environmental context for her work, she found it in a setting that perfectly aligned with her interests: a rare summer camp for queer and disabled students and students of color.

There, Baker was at ease with the students, and they shared a sense of comfort with her, in part because she divulged her own neurodivergent tendencies, she says. 鈥淚 really understood and wanted to understand these kids and listen to them, and they sensed that, so they very much gravitated towards me,鈥� she says.

The camp provided the kids with a vastly different learning experience than their typical school settings. 鈥淚t was outdoors, away from families, school and support systems. The students were going through a lot personally, but they were still able to focus and learn in that inclusive and healing space, and that difference was transformative for them,鈥� Baker says.

Formal Training

Baker says her highly interdisciplinary background, qualitative research experience and research with multiply marginalized students across K-12 and higher education earned her the spot in the biology lab. Associate Professor Sarah Eddy, who runs the lab, says she appreciates Baker鈥檚 formal training in education and her depth of knowledge. 鈥淲hat I have valued is the depth of knowledge graduates have developed, through their education Ph.D., in quantitative聽methods, qualitative聽methods and/or both educational theory and also critical theories. I appreciate how my projects are stronger when I partner with colleagues with formal training,鈥� Eddy says.

Though Baker is still analyzing her dissertation findings, she hopes her research will lead to the questioning of arbitrary disability labels now used within K-12 schools, provide critical connections to schooling that takes place outside of formal education settings and reveal deeper meaning behind kids’ learning in relation to nature and STEM education, she says.

And while she鈥檒l be conducting her lab projects remotely, Baker is satisfied that she won鈥檛 be working alone. Having new counterparts in a setting where she鈥檚 looked to for her unique strengths, skills and characteristics is exciting, she says.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 do research alone, let alone good research, and the most impactful experiences I鈥檝e had at 黑料不打烊 are in lab spaces and collective groups. Being able to focus on a research agenda will allow me to feel comfortable and content about the work I鈥檓 doing instead of feeling the 鈥榤ad dash鈥� to do it all,鈥� she says. 鈥淭his is allowing me to dip my foot in to see if academia is still the world I want to be a part of, and it seems like this role will support whatever avenue I want to take.鈥�

  • Author

Diane Stirling

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