Bryan Ripley Crandall, PhD, Honored for Community Engagement with Connecticut Schools

Bryan Ripley Crandall, PhD, Honored for Community Engagement with Connecticut Schools

Media Contact: Susan Cipollaro, scipollaro@fairfield.edu , 203-254-4000, ext. 2726

FAIRFIELD, Conn. (December 15, 2017)— Bryan Ripley Crandall, PhD, director of the Connecticut Writing Project (CWP) Fairfield and assistant professor in the Graduate School of Education and Allied Professions (GSEAP) has been named a recipient of the 2018 Divergent Award for Excellence by the Initiative for 21 st Century Literacies Research. Dr. Crandall, who was recognized locally with the Elizabeth M. Pfriem Inspiration Award last spring, will be honored at Oklahoma State University in February. The Divergent Award for Excellence is given to innovative researchers who diverge from traditional pedagogies and research methodologies, and recognizes the lasting contributions of educators and scholars who have dedicated their careers to the theoretical and practical study of 21st century literacies.

“Bryan has been a leader and an inspiration for all of us in GSEAP,” said Bob Hannafin, PhD, dean of the GSEAP. “He is a tireless advocate for all children, but especially underprivileged kids.”

In 2014-2015, Crandall and a team of six local educators collaborated to provide high school students with opportunities to compose digitally about their local communities. Funded through the John Legend Show Me Campaign, MacArthur Foundation, and National Writing Project , the LRNG Innovation Award project culminated at Fairfield University with a Writing Our Lives-Digital Ubuntu conference with author Matt de la Peña as a keynote. That same year, Crandall also designed several summer Young Adult Literacy Labs to provide writing workshops in a wide variety of genres and themes. The workshops, which include Ubuntu Academy, a literacy lab for newly arrived refugees and immigrant youth, and Project Citizen, a workshop on political writing, work in tandem with teachers participating in a National Writing Project summer institute.

Margaret Hiller, executive director of Bridgeport Public Education Fund, said, “Dr. Crandall has done so much to form robust partnerships with Bridgeport Public Schools. He continues to give students the opportunity to experience learning on a college campus at Fairfield, and because of his dedication to urban education, has formed invaluable partnerships that did not exist before all of his efforts.”

Posted On: 12-18-2017 11:12 AM

Volume: 50 Number: 86

Fairfield University is a Jesuit University, rooted in one of the world’s oldest intellectual and spiritual traditions. More than 5,000 undergraduate and graduate students from 36 states, 47 foreign countries, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico are enrolled in the University’s five schools.  In the spirit of rigorous and sympathetic inquiry into all dimensions of human experience, Fairfield welcomes students from diverse backgrounds to share ideas and engage in open conversations. The University is located in the heart of a region where the future takes shape, on a stunning campus on the Connecticut coast just an hour from New York City.