Staff
Michelle M. Englund
Michelle M. Englund is a Research Associate for the Early Childhood Research Collaborative. Dr. Englund received her Ph.D. in Education with a specialization in Family Education and a minor in Child Psychology in 1997 from the University of Minnesota. She has worked in numerous capacities on the Minnesota Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children at the Institute of Child Development, University Of Minnesota, for the past 18 years. This is an on-going longitudinal study of high-risk participants who have been followed from birth through age 28. In addition, she has worked on a number of other research projects, including research developing and testing an instructional design to facilitate higher order thinking skills of early childhood educators. She has also managed and administered legislatively mandated programs in her work with the Minnesota Higher Education Coordinating Board. Much of her research work has examined how early relationships, especially parent-child relationships, influence later competence, including educational success. She is particularly interested in relationship factors that impact children’s learning. A recent manuscript examines how the quality of instruction provided by parents in problem solving tasks prior to school entry sets the stage for children’s later learning and educational attainment in young adulthood. Dr. Englund has published journal articles on peer relationships, education, and substance use, and has presented her research at international conferences.
Michelle Englund can be reached at 612-624-5792 or by e-mail at englu008@umn.edu.
Spotlight:
i3 Grant Announcement, December 22, 2011
HCRC receives Investing in Innovation (i3) Fund grant for Midwest CPC Expansion [pdf], December 21, 2011
Human Capital Research Collaborative Brown Bag Faculty Research Seminars, 3rd Tuesday of the month, Oct. 2011–Apr. 2012
U study finds big preschool payoffs, Star Tribune, June 9, 2011
Art Rolnick testifies before the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Children and Families, June 9, 2011
Art Rolnick presents at TEDxTC on the Economic Case for Early Childhood Development, May 5, 2010
Highlighted Discussion Papers
The Public Returns to Public Educational Investments in African American Males
Child Interventions That May Lead to Increased Economic Growth
Past News and Events
Human Capital Research Collaborative Brown Bag Faculty Research Seminars, 3rd Tuesday of the month, Sept. 2010–Apr. 2011
Assessing the Validity of Minnesota School Readiness Indicators [pdf]
Health and Early Childhood Development: The Impact of Health on School Readiness and Other Education Outcomes, October 14 & 15, 2010


