91ÉçÇø
Professor of School Psychology and Human Development in the Department of Educational and Counselling Psychology at 91ÉçÇø in Montreal, Canada. He is the founder and director of the and a co-investigator on three past and current national networks funded by the Canadian Institutes for Health Research – the , the , and Roots of Resilience (co-funded by the Medical Research Council of New Zealand). He is a member of the editorial boards of and the , and a member of the advisory boards of both the Postdoctoral and Merck Doctoral Program on Research in Mental Retardation at the University of Wisconsin.
Jake and his students work within the MYST motto of “a commitment to excellence in the study and education of all children." Their theoretical framework is that of developmental psychopathology, the interface of typical and atypical development and developmental histories. Accordingly, the emphasis of their conceptual writings is on the contributions of developmental theory and methodology to the study of psychological risk and well-being. One focus of their empirical study is the development of attention and cognition among typically developing children, persons with autism, and persons with Down syndrome. Another focus of their empirical work is the school-based study of role of the cultural identity and other predictors in the academic success, social adaptation, and emotional well-being of First Nations adolescents in northern communities. [view profile]
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