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Jason T. Downer

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University of Virginia · Human Development

Active 1999–2024

h-index52
Citations11.6k
Papers13035 last 5y
Funding$5.2M
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Research topics

  • Political Science
  • Computer Science
  • Medical education
  • Pedagogy
  • Developmental psychology
  • Psychology
  • Medicine
  • Social psychology
  • Psychiatry
  • Nursing

Selected publications

  • Narrowing the Research-to-Practice Gap in Effective Professional Development in a State Preschool Program: Describing the Process and Findings from a Research-Practice Partnership

    Early Childhood Research Quarterly · 2023 · 4 citations

    • Political Science
    • Computer Science
    • Medical education
  • Implementation of an early childhood mental health consultation pilot in Virginia: Critical tensions and implications for scale-up

    Frontiers in Education · 2023 · 7 citations

    • Political Science
    • Medical education
    • Psychology

    Early childhood mental health consultation (ECMHC) is a targeted prevention service that aims to build the capacity of early care and education (ECE) professionals and foster supportive environments that promote children’s social–emotional competence and improve mental health and well-being. A key challenge to delivering ECMHC at scale is navigating complex multi-level factors to maximize successful implementation and program benefits at scale. The current study describes the implementation tensions arising during the first year of a pilot ECMHC program conducted in partnership across multiple agencies and a state’s department of education. In the 2021–2022 pilot year, ECMHC was offered as a free service to ECE programs in one large region of Virginia, with the goal of examining feasibility to scale statewide in future years. Consultation was implemented in 45 preschool classrooms across 30 programs. Implementation data were collected using consultation logs and participant surveys, and 20 participants (educators, families, program directors) participated in focus groups. Three implementation tensions are highlighted in this paper: (1) ideal plans versus reality of a new ECMHC roll-out; (2) how to support ECE professionals’ practice as it relates to children’s behavior, without contributing to a deficit view that children need to be “fixed;” and (3) systemic factors in the early childhood field that undermine the implementation and effectiveness of ECMHC. For each tension, we provide context from the larger literature on ECMHC, describe relevant decision points from Virginia’s pilot ECMHC program, and present implementation data to illustrate these tensions in practice. We conclude with reflections on lessons learned that have implications for other ECMHC and SEL intervention scale-up efforts.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Robert C. Pianta

    University of Virginia

    63 shared
  • Bridget K. Hamre

    Institute for Advanced Study

    48 shared
  • Amanda P. Williford

    University of Virginia

    30 shared
  • Jennifer LoCasale‐Crouch

    Virginia Commonwealth University

    28 shared
  • Carollee Howes

    California Department of Education

    26 shared
  • Andrew J. Mashburn

    Portland State University

    19 shared
  • Margaret Burchinal

    California Department of Education

    16 shared
  • Joshua L. Brown

    Fordham University

    15 shared
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