Learning Sciences and Psychological Studies in Education (LSPSE) Hub

The members of the LSPSE hub teach and research theories relevant to learning in formal and informal settings across the lifespan.

Our goal is to develop an in-depth understanding of how individuals and groups respond to educational processes such as instruction, curriculum, feedback, adult and peer interaction, and assessment processes, so that practical and effective improvements can be made by instructors and learners. The LSPSE hub works to advance psychological science by using or developing rigorous scientific research methods, such as experiments, surveys, tests, interviews, naturalistic and structured observations, and so on.

What we teach

Our hub teaches courses on educational psychology, developmental psychology, social psychology, and research methods. The courses we teach are largely within the BA Educational Studies program and are available to students in the Arts faculty or in some cases students taking psychology in the Faculty of Science. We also teach post-graduate courses in those areas.

The pathways we teach are outlined here:

BA Degree        
Pathway Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Postgraduate
Developmental Psychology 115 200, 221, 224 300, 352, 380 706, 742, 747
Educational & Social Psychology 121 223, 224, 283 316, 323, 351, 380 706, 738, 741, 755

*All courses are EDUC.

Who we are

LSPSE has psychologists who teach a wide range of psychological theories and methods. The hub also has affiliates who work in areas strongly related to LSPSE.

  • The LSPSE Hub is led by Prof. Gavin T. L. Brown, who specialises in psychological research methods (esp. statistics and testing). His substantive research is on cross-cultural psychological effects of assessment.
  • Prof. Christine Rubie-Davies is a key member, with her world-leading expertise in teacher expectations.
  • Assoc. Prof. Jason Stephens is an expert in academic motivation, moral functioning, and cheating behaviour.
  • Dr Kane Meissel focuses on the implications of methodological decisions upon the conclusions being made. He is the Principal Investigator for the Our Voices study, an innovative large sample multimodal study partnering with the Growing Up in New Zealand cohort. His research uses reflective and nuanced critical quantitative methods, often drawing on longitudinal cohort data.
  • Dr Pat Bullen leads our work on adolescent development and youth mentoring, member of the Adolescent Health Research Group and co-lead of the health and wellbeing aspect of the longitudinal survey study Growing Up in New Zealand.
  • Dr Deb Widdowson is a specialist in developmental psychology.
  • Dr Janna Wardman specialises in the teaching and learning of gifted and talented students.
  • Dr Hilary Dutton specialises in youth and educational psychology, with responsibility for teaching social psychology.
  • Dr Willow Sainsbury specialises in neurodevelopmental conditions and has responsibility for development of masters-level educational psychology programmes.
  • Dr Annaline Flint specialises in the area of teacher beliefs.
  • Dr Georgia Rudd is a Research Fellow and specialises in educational psychology.

Affiliated members:

  • Assoc. Prof. Richard J. Hamilton, (retired) is a specialist in cognitive psychology.
  • Dr Penelope Watson (retired) is a specialist in gender and social psychology.
  • Dr Shengnan Wang is the part-time Research Fellow in Quantitative Data Analysis and Research (Quant-DARE) unit. Her interest is in teacher expectations.
  • Dr Mohamed Alansari is an honorary academic and senior researcher at NZCER. His speciality is learning environments research.
  • Ms. Sheryll McIntosh is a senior tutor providing tutoring and teaching in many of our courses.