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Home : About Us : Professional Advisory Board
Professional Advisory Board

Georgios D. Sideridis, Ph.D.
Chairman, LDW® Professional Advisory Board
Georgios Sideridis, Ph.D. is currently an Associate Professor at the Department of Psychology at the University of Crete. He has been a research scientist with the Center for Social Development and Education at UMASS Boston and a research associate professor at the Department of Psychology at UMASS Boston. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Kansas and did postdoctoral work at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and Harvard University. He is researching motivation and underachievement, particularly in populations vulnerable to failure such as students with LD. In particular, he is interested in understanding the interplay of emotional factors, personality characteristics, and cognition and their contribution to achievement and well being.

Dr. Sideridis has published more than 80 articles in professional journals such as the Journal of Educational Psychology and Journal of Learning Disabilities and has presented in national and international conferences. He is co-editorLearning Disabilities: A Contemporary Journal, and is the associate editor of the Hellenic Journal of Psychology, he is on the Editorial Board of Remedial and Special Education, Assessment for Effective Interventions, Reading and Writing Quarterly, Physical Education and Sports, and has served as an Adhoc reviewer for Psychological Assessment, Behavioral Disorders, Journal of Special Education, Topics in Early Childhood Special Education, etc.

He has also served as a Guest Editor for the International Journal of Educational Research and Learning Disability Quarterly and has edited the first two of three books on best practices in LD, Research to Practice, through LDW®.

He is Chairman of the Professional Advisory Board of Learning Disabilities Worldwide, member of the American Psychological Association and of other scientific organizations such as ABA, NASP, and CEC. Dr. Sideridis has taught undergraduate and graduate courses at the University of Massachusetts Boston, University of Crete, University of Kansas, the Psychology and Early Childhood Departments of the Aristotle University, the American College of Thessaloniki, and City Liberal Studies. He has also been a statistical consultant for various research groups.

Robert Brooks, Ph.D.
Dr. Brooks received his doctorate in clinical psychology from Clark University and did additional training at the University of Colorado Medical School. He is on the faculty of Harvard Medical School and has served as Director of the Department of Psychology at McLean Hospital, a private psychiatric hospital. He completed a videotape and educational guide for PBS titled "Look What You've Done! Stories of Hope and Resilience" that focuses on self-esteem and resilience in children with special needs and participated in the production of two videotapes by Sunburst Communications, one about parenting children with learning and attentional problems and the other about developing responsibility in children.

Dr. Robert Brooks has lectured nationally and internationally to audiences of parents, educators, mental health professionals, and business people on topics pertaining to motivation, resilience, self-esteem, family relationships, the qualities of effective leaders and executives, and balancing our personal and professional lives. He is the author of a book titled The Self-Esteem Teacher and co-author with Dr. Sam Goldstein of the following books: Raising Resilient Children; Nurturing Resilience in Our Children: Answers to the Most Important Parenting Questions; Seven Steps to Help Your Child Worry Less (with Kristy Hagar); Angry Children, Worried Parents: Seven Steps to Help Families Manage Anger (with Sharon Weiss); and The Power of Resilience: Achieving Balance, Confidence, and Personal Strength in Your Life (the latter book focuses on resilience in adults). In addition, Dr. Brooks is co-author of a book with Drs. Mel Levine and Jack Shonkoff titled A Pediatric Approach to Learning Disorders and has written a sex education book for the young child called So That's How I Was Born! Drs. Brooks and Goldstein have recently co-edited a textbook titled Handbook of Resilience in Children.

Dr. Brooks received a Gubernatorial Award for Distinguished Public Service for his work with the Governor's Alliance Against Drugs; as part of his contribution to the Alliance, he co-authored a pamphlet for parents about talking with children and adolescents about drugs. Dr. Brooks also received "Hall of Fame" awards from both CH.A.D.D. (Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorders) and the Connecticut Association for Children with Learning Disabilities for his work with special needs children and adolescents, a Special Recognition and Media Award from the Massachusetts Psychological Association, the "Friends of Families Award" from the Family Place for his work on behalf of children and families, and the Outstanding Educator Award for Mental Health Education from the New England Educational Institute.

Donald Deshler, Ph.D.
Donald Deshler, Ph.D. received his doctorate in Special Education with a minor in psychology from the University of Arizona. He is a professor in the Department of Special Education and Director of the Center for Research on Learning (CRL) at the University of Kansas. As Director of the Center for Research on Learning, Dr. Deshler has created an international training and dissemination network of more than 900 trainers who provide staff development for schools on educational procedures validated through CRL research.

Dr. Deshler and his staff have developed the Strategies Intervention Model and the Learning Strategies Curriculum as mechanisms for improving the learning effectiveness of students with learning disabilities and the instructional effectiveness of teachers.

Dr. Deshler is the author of the textbook Teaching Adolescents with Learning Disabilities: Strategies and Methods. Dr. Deshler was the original editor of the Councils for Learning Disabilities' journal, The Learning Disability Quarterly, and is currently on the editorial boards of several other journals in learning disabilities and special education. He is the recipient of the Louise Byrd Outstanding Graduate Educator of the Year Award and the Higuchi Research Achievement Award at the University of Kansas.

Henry Nicholas Elksnin, Ph.D.
Nick Elksnin has more than 25 years of experience as a school psychologist, special education consultant, and special education administrator. He earned his doctorate in educational psychology from the University of Georgia and was a post-doctoral fellow in Pediatrics and Psychiatry at the Medical University of South Carolina. Dr. Elksnin is Visiting Professor of Education at The Citadel.

Dr. Elksnin is the co-author of the texts Teaching Social-Emotional Skills at School and Home, Teaching Occupational Social Skills, Working with Students with Disabilities in Vocational-Technical Settings, Assessment and Instruction of Social Skills, and Introduction with Developmental Disabilities. Nick is co-editor of Assessment for Effective Intervention and on the editorial boards of Learning Disabilities: A Contemporary Journal and Intervention in School and Clinic. He was guest editor of Exceptionality and Learning Disability Quarterly.

Dr. Elksnin has consulted with numerous school districts, private schools, Head Start, and the College Board. He is a licensed Psycho-Educational Specialist and a Nationally Certified School Psychologist. He is a frequent presenter at national conferences.

Linda K. Elksnin, Ph.D.
Linda K. Elksnin earned her doctorate in special education from the University of Virginia. Dr. Elksnin is Professor of Education at The Citadel where she received several teaching awards. She has taught students with disabilities at the preschool, elementary, and secondary levels.

Dr. Elksnin is the co-author with Dr. Nick Elksnin of three texts: Teaching Social-Emotional Skills at School and Home, Occupational Social Skills, and Assessment and Instruction of Social Skills. She co-authored Educational Assessment of Learning Problems with Gerald Wallace and Steve Larsen. Dr. Elksnin is co-editor of Assessment for Effective Intervention and serves on the editorial boards of Learning Disabilities: A Contemporary Journal, Learning Disability Quarterly, Exceptionality, Remedial and Special Education, and Intervention in School and Clinic. She was guest editor of Exceptionality and Learning Disability Quarterly.

Dr. Elksnin is past president of the International Council for Learning Disabilities and was a member of the Learning Disabilities Roundtable, which authored Commentary Regarding Reauthorization of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. She is a member of the International Academy for Research in Learning Disabilities.

Doug Fuchs, Ph.D.
Douglas Fuchs, Ph.D. received his doctorate in Educational Psychology from the University of Minnesota. He is a professor in the Department of Special Education at Peabody College, Vanderbilt University in Nashville Tennessee.

Dr. Fuchs's research has focused on the development of effective and practical pre-referral interventions, peer-assisted learning strategies in reading and math, curriculum-based measurement procedures, and methods of reintegrating students with high-incidence disabilities into mainstream settings.

He is the author or co-author of more than 200 articles in peer-review journals, and has won "best paper" awards for several of these publications, including the American Educational Research Association's Palmer O. Johnson Award, the American Psychological Association's Fellows' Award (Division 16), the Samuel A. Kirk Award (Division for Learning Disabilities of the Council for Exceptional Children), and "Best Paper of the Year" Award (National Association of School Psychologists). In 2001, he was named Joe B. Wyatt Distinguished University Professor by Vanderbilt University . In 2003, with Lynn Fuchs, he was awarded the Council for Exceptional Children's Career Research Award.

Lynn Fuchs, Ph.D.
Lynn Fuchs, Ph.D. is a professor in the Department of Special Education at Peabody College at Vanderbilt University specializing in classroom-based assessment and reading instruction. She received her doctorate in Educational Psychology at the University of Minnesota.

Dr. Fuchs has over 20 years experience working with students with special needs. She is a nationally recognized expert conducting research on classroom-based assessment and instructional methods to enhance outcomes for students with disabilities. She is the co-director of the Vanderbilt Reading Clinic, which provides intensive reading instruction to students with severe reading disabilities and designs sophisticated evaluation methods to track and account for student growth. She was the co-editor of the Journal of Special Education for 15 years and currently serves on the boards of 10 journals. In 1998, Dr. Fuchs was the co-recipient of the Mayor's Award for the best article in an American Educational Research Association Journal. She was also the recipient of the Samuel Kirk award for Best Practice Article in Learning Disabilities Research and Practice (2000), of the School Psychology Review Best Article of the Year award (2001), and of the Career Research Award from the Council for Exceptional Children.

Edward Hallowell, M.D.
Edward (Ned) Hallowell, M.D. is a child and adult psychiatrist and the founder of The Hallowell Center for Cognitive and Emotional Health in Sudbury, MA. He was a member of the faculty of the Harvard Medical School from 1983 to 2004.

A graduate of Harvard College and the Tulane School of Medicine, Dr. Hallowell is an expert at offering practical ways to approach some of life's most difficult challenges. He is the co-author of the national best sellers, Driven to Distraction (Pantheon, 1994) and Answers to Distraction (Pantheon, 1995), both of which discuss attention deficit disorder in children and in adults. In addition, he has written books addressing emotional issues such as the importance of forgiveness (Dare to Forgive, 2004), worry and anxiety (Worry and When You Worry About the Child You Love), how to raise happy children (The Childhood Roots of Adult Happiness, 2002) and many more.

Doris Johnson, Ph.D.

Howard Margolis, Ed.D.

H. Lee Swanson, Ph.D.
H. Lee Swanson, Ph.D. holds an endowed chair and the rank of Distinguished Professor at the University of California at Riverside. He did his postdoctoral work at UCLA in the area of cognitive psychology and received his Ph.D. in educational psychology at the University of New Mexico. He has held the Peloy Chair since 1991. Professor of Education and Peloy Chair

Dr. Swanson is the author of numerous articles and textbooks. One of his articles (published in Developmental Psychology) which focused on the relationship between aging and memory was highlighted in 1999 by CBS News, The New York Times, and NPR. He served as editor of the Learning Disability Quarterly from 1988 to 1998 and he serves on the review board of fifteen journals. He has two recent textbooks: Handbook of Learning Disabilities co-edited with Karen Harris and Steve Graham, and A Comprehensive Analysis of Interventions For Students with Learning Disabilities: A Meta-analysis of the Literature, (coauthored with Maureen Hoskyn and Carole Lee).

Sharon Vaughn, Ph.D.
Sharon Vaughn, Ph.D., a leading expert on learning difficulties, is the director for the Vaughn Gross Center for Reading and Language Arts. She received her doctorate degree from the University of Arizona.

Dr. Vaughn holds the H.E. Hartfelder/Southland Corp. Regents Chair in Human development. She is the author of numerous books and research articles that address the reading and social outcomes of students with learning difficulties. She is currently the Principal Investigator or Co-Principal Investigator on several Institute for Education Science, National Institute for Child Health and Human Development, and Office of Special Education Programs research grants investigating effective interventions for students with reading difficulties and students who are English language learners.

Dr. Vaughn has received many awards including the American Research association, Special Education Research Special Education SIG, Outstanding Researcher Award, the University of Texas Dean's Award for Research. Dr. Vaughn is the Past President, Division for Learning Disabilities, Council for Exceptional Children. She is also the Previous Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Learning Disabilities.

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