Expertise

Child development:
I earned my Master’s degree in Child Development from the prestigious Eliot-Pearson Department of Child Development at Tufts University, specializing in children’s media.

Over the course of my career, I’ve worked with children of all ages in multiple contexts. I taught pre-school for 3.5 years, conducted research with 1st grade English Language Learners, taught summer enrichment programs to 5- to 9-year-olds in India, studied 6th and 7th grade girls’ instant messaging and social aggression, facilitated after-school programs in new literacies and improvisation for high school freshmen in Los Angeles (Felt, Vartabedian, Literat & Mehta, 2012), and designed a social and emotional learning + new media literacies curriculum for 15- to 21-year-olds in Senegal (Felt & Rideau, 2012).

I understand how children’s cognitive, physical, social, and emotional development occurs over time, and appreciate how this development informs youths’ capacities and preferences in terms of play, study, and communication.

Games and learning:
I work with Henry Jenkins, one of the nation’s foremost experts in participatory culture and learning. Our research group, PLAY! (Participatory Learning And You!), has implemented several professional development initiatives oriented towards supporting students’ rich learning (Vartabedian & Felt, 2012; Reilly, Jenkins, Felt, & Vartabedian, 2012; Reilly, Vartabedian, Felt & Jenkins, 2012).

I am a co-founder of USC Impact Games, a cross-campus working group that unifies theorists, designers, engineers, and investigators from sundry disciplines. I also consult with Laughter for a Change, a non-profit organization that uses theater games in order to teach members of its workshops about “Playing agreement. Risk taking. Spontaneity. Changing perspectives. Opening up to moments of discovery and surprise. Making active, not passive, choices,” among other things (cited in McFarren, 2011).

I understand how games teach, and how good games can make a profound impact.

Social and emotional learning:
I’ve studied social and emotional learning theoretically and practically in multiple ways, such as by writing a 25-page analysis of empathy (Felt, 2011) and creating curricula that seek to scaffold interpersonal and intrapersonal competence.

I understand the components of social and emotional learning and am passionate about incorporating them as both means and ends of educational experiences.

Overall:
I am uniquely qualified to function as a bridge-builder and translator, helping members of multiple specializations to leverage other fields’ findings and best practices, with the goal of constructing the highest-quality, most impactful product possible.

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