Christopher J. Cormier

Associate Professor

  • Los Angeles CA UNITED STATES

Department of Teaching and Learning

Contact

Biography

Dr. Christopher J. Cormier is a former special education teacher and an Associate Professor of teaching and learning in the School of Education at Loyola Marymount University. He has taught first through 12th in Title 1 schools in the Greater Los Angeles Metropolitan area. His research program focuses on the social and cultural contexts of minoritized learners and teachers in special education. Under this overarching theme, he has two lines of scholarship. The first is on the professional and socio-emotional lives of minoritized teachers. The second is on culturally informed identification of minoritized students in special education. Dr. Cormier brings a comparative lens to both of his research lines with studies in national and international contexts. He has sreved as the President of the Division for Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Exceptional Learners (DDEL) of the Council for Exceptional Children and was a Director-at-Large for Kappa Delta Pi Incorporated.

Current research projects include the following:

•Special education teacher burnout, stress, and mental health and how it changes over the school year.

•Understanding the protective nature of Afrocentric schools in the United States and Canada and its impact on Black students with disabilities.

Education

Stanford University

Postdoctoral Research Fellow

University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

PhD

Special Education

Pepperdine University

MAEd w/emphasis in Psychology

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Areas of Expertise

Education Policy
Equity in Education
History of Education
International and Comparative Education
Psychchology
Race and Ethnicity
Sociology
Special Education
Teachers and Teaching

Industry Expertise

Education/Learning
Research
Public Policy

Affiliations

  • Council for Exceptional Children
  • American Educational Research Association
  • British Educational Research Association
  • Toastmasters International
  • Kappa Delta Pi Incorporated

Media Appearances

Dr. Phil Show

Paramount Studios  tv

2022-12-20

Learning Loss During Lockdown: Are There Solutions?

Courses

EDUR 6002: Justice, Equity, Diversity, & Inclusion in Education

Spring 2024

EDES 6611: Masters Professional Project

Spring 2024

EDES 6608: Research Methods in Special Education

Fall 2023

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Articles

A comparison of measurement of stability and predictors of special education burnout and work engagement (accepted)

Remedial and Special Education

Ruble, L., Cormier, C. J., McGrew, J., Dueber, D.

2024-03-04

Special education teacher (SET) stress and burnout is a significant problem. A total of 490 SETs were surveyed across the United States. The purpose of this study was to: (a) assess and compare three measures of burnout / work engagement, the Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI), the Oldenburg Burnout Inventory (OLBI), and the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale (UWES) and
examine change over the course of a school year during the COVID-19 pandemic. Almost 90% of teachers fell within the dangerous/at risk level of burnout. Significant measurement quality issues were observed for the MBI and OLBI, including questionable convergent validity. Burnout of SETs was found to be highly stable for the MBI and OLBI. Teachers experienced little mean change in burnout over the shool year, and perceptions of the effects of COVID, and demographic and school variables were generally not predictive of change in burnout for any measure. Implications are discussed.

Misidentification, misinformation, and miseducation: The experiences of minoritized students and representation in public schools across three societies around the globe

Peabody Journal of Education

Cormier, C. J.

2024-03-14

...The aim of this themed issue is to highlight the stories of students who must contend with structural racism and marginalization at school. Some of these stories have not been told before; some may seem familiar. However, such narratives are usually only presented within what I call a “metropolitan puzzle.” By this I mean that all of the pieces that fit together to tell these stories generally render an image of only one society, typically the United States (U.S.), and sometimes even a subset of the U.S. such as its urban areas. Education journals and the organizations that sponsor them claim to be internationally focused, to seek to advance the greater good by calling attention to systemic barriers affecting educational systems across the globe. Yet published issue after published issue in academic journals contain wholly or mainly articles written by U.S. scholars who have done their research in the U.S. It is time for more globally based empirical scholarship that connects the experiences of students worldwide with those of students in that reputed melting pot or mixing bowl, the United States. In parallel to the claim of a melting pot is the belief that racial and ethnic barriers are intrinsically higher in the U.S. than in some other places...

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Hiding and seeking: The educational and socioemotional needs of asylum seeker and refugee students [in press]

Peabody Journal of Education

Kan, T., & Cormier, C. J.

2024-03-14

Focusing on asylum seeker and refugee students attending a school with the stated mission to cater to recent immigrants, asylees, and refugees in Texas, this study we explore the school experiences of asylum-seeking and refugee middle schoolers and how they see their education. Students envisioned their ideal classrooms with a group drawing exercise and then discussed these visions, the experiences that shaped them, and how their current schooling experience compares to their ideal in in-depth interviews. Complementary school data was also collected. By focusing on asylum seeker and refugee students, we sought to eschew assimilationist ideologies and to highlight the diversity of experiences and interpretations within this group. We explored the themes found in students' conceptualizations of their ideals, including the high aspirations students hold, their comparative outlook on education processes, the centrality of relationships to student success, and the conflicted identities students have to negotiate daily.

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