Bob Feldman still remembers those moments of being overwhelmed when
he started college at Wesleyan University. I wondered whether I was
up to the challenges that faced me, he recalls, andalthough I never
would have admitted it at the timeI really had no idea what it took
to be successful at college.
That experience, along with his encounters with many students
during his own teaching career, led to a life-long interest in
helping students navigate the critical transition that they face at
the start of their own college careers. Professor Feldman, who went
on to receive a doctorate in psychology from the University of
WisconsinMadison, is now Deputy Chancellor and Professor of
Psychological and Brain Sciences at the University of Massachusetts
Amherst. He is founding director of POWER Up for Student Success,
the first-year experience course for incoming students.
Professor Feldmans proudest professional accomplishment is winning
the College Outstanding Teaching Award at UMass. He also has been
named a Hewlett Teaching Fellow and was Senior Online Instruction
Fellow. He has taught courses at Mount Holyoke College, Wesleyan
University, and Virginia Commonwealth University. Professor Feldman
is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association, the
Association for Psychological Science, and the American Association
for the Advancement of Science. He is a winner of a Fulbright
Senior Research Scholar and Lecturer award and has written over 200
scientific articles, book chapters, and books. His books, some of
which have been translated into Spanish, French, Portuguese, Dutch,
Japanese, and Chinese, include Improving the First Year of College:
Research and Practice; Understanding Psychology, 12/e; and
Development Across the Life Span, 7/e. His research interests
encompass the study of honesty and truthfulness in everyday life,
development of nonverbal behavior in children, and the social
psychology of education. His research has been supported by grants
from the National Institute of Mental Health and the National
Institute on Disabilities and Rehabilitation Research.
With the last of his three children completing college, Professor
Feldman occupies his spare time with pretty decent cooking and
earnest, but admittedly unpolished, piano playing. He also loves to
travel. He lives with his wife, who is an educational psychologist,
in a home overlooking the Holyoke mountain range in western
Massachusetts.
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