Jill Hogan has been in the Psychology Department at Siena College since 2021. Prior to that, she was a visiting faculty member in Psychology at College of Idaho and in Music Education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Before returning to academia, she was a general music teacher for students in Kindergarten through Grade 8, mostly teaching in schools with atypical student populations. Jill uses mixed and multi-methods to investigate thinking in and about the arts in schools. Her research interests center in habits of mind in arts education - broad ways of thinking that have fuzzy definitions and are potentially transferrable to other domains. Examples of these include persisting, working for the common good, goal-setting, being prepared, observing, listening, and exploring. She enjoys working with practicing K-12 teachers on applied research in artistic thinking, and is wicked proud to be from Massachusetts, having earned degrees from Boston College and Boston Conservatory.
Degree | Program | University |
---|---|---|
Ph.D. | Developmental Psychology | Boston College |
M.A. | Developmental Psychology | Boston College |
M.M. | Music Education | Boston Conservatory |
B.M. | Clarinet Performance | Boston Conservatory |
My Siena Experience
My Teaching Philosophy
In short, no one learns long-term if they are not interested. I use humor and student choice to help facilitate my aim of long-lasting learning, useful far after the final exams have been scored.
What I Love About Siena
Chatting with students!
My Favorite Courses to Teach
I like teaching Lifespan Development and Child Development and working with undergraduates on research projects.
My Professional Experience
Year | Title | Organization |
---|---|---|
2020 - 2021 | Visiting Assistant Professor of Psychology | College of Idaho |
2019 - 2020 | Visiting Assistant Professor of Music Education | University of Wisconsin Madison |
Current Research
There is much that the arts can do for us -- provide us with alternate ways of understanding, allow us to communicate more fully, connect us with each other, heal emotional traumas, and learn life broad habits of mind. For all we empirically know and anecdotally believe about the arts, there also dozens of claims made about the power of the arts that remain uninvestigated or are based on only correlational evidence. My research critically investigates questions about the demonstrable benefits of arts education, as well as public perceptions about the benefits of arts education. More information about my research can be found at www.jillhoganinboston.com
Articles & Book Reviews
- Shifting perspectives of quality in art education
Art Education
2020 - Is more time in general music class associated with stronger extra-musical outcomes in kindergarten?
Early Childhood Research Quarterly
2018 - Looking at the process: Examining creative and artistic thinking in fashion designers on a reality television show.
Frontiers in Psychology
2018
Awards & Distinctions
- Frank X. Barron Award
Category: Research
Division 10 of the American Psychological Association, 2021
Books & Book Chapters
- Handbook of Philosophical and Qualitative Perspectives on Assessment in Music Education
Oxford University Press
2019 - Studio Thinking from the Start: The K-8 Art Teacher's Handbook
Teacher's College Press
2018