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Headshot of Christina L. Scanlon

Christina L. Scanlon, PhD

Executive Director, Development-in-Sociocultural-Context (DISC) Research Lab andResearch Associate
clscanlon@uchicago.edu
Department
Development in Sociocultural Context (DISC) Lab
Department:
Development in Sociocultural Context (DISC) Lab
Address

969 E. 60th Street

Chicago, IL 60637

Office Location: 950 Building

Areas of Expertise
Child and Youth Development
Culture, parenting, identity development, and ethnic-racial socialization
Diversity, Opportunity, and Equity
Mental Health
Motivation, engagement, and youth development in context
Racial, SES, and gender disparities in education and health
Risk and resilience
School climate and racial disparities in school discipline
Sociocultural, affective, and cognitive processes in learning

Christina L. Scanlon, PhD,  is the Executive Director of the Development-in-Sociocultural-Context Research Lab and Research Associate at the University of Chicago’s Crown School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice. With a PhD in Applied Developmental Psychology from the University of Pittsburgh, her research focuses on understanding youth risk and resilience as shaped by sociocultural influences, developmental competencies, and sociohistorical context, especially among those from marginalized and minoritized backgrounds. She uses daily diary, mixed-method, and participatory action research designs to better understand how youth’s context-based phenomenological experiences in both real-world and virtual spaces influence socioemotional development, coping, and mental health throughout adolescence. Scanlon also has extensive expertise in creating and implementing developmentally appropriate, ecologically valid interventions within schools, after-school programming, and community-based settings.

Her peer-reviewed research has been published in outlets such as Child Development, Developmental Psychology, the American Educational Research Journal, the American Psychologist, Learning and Instruction, and the Journal of School Psychology. She regularly presents this work at national conferences, including the American Educational Research Association (AERA) and the Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD). In addition, she has delivered invited talks and keynotes for University of Chicago initiatives, including the Urban Education Institute's Network for College Success and the To&Through Project.