Emerging Scholars

Emerging Scholars are: (a) current graduate students, (b) post-docs, and (c) junior faculty, adjuncts, research associates, lab directors, or independent researchers who are pre-tenure and within 5 years of having received their doctorate.

We are a vibrant community of early career members with a shared interest in becoming more involved in the Jean Piaget Society. Join us for opportunities for professional development, networking, developing research collaborations, and mentorship from senior members of JPS. We host two events at the annual meeting (a roundtable lunch and dinner social) and primarily stay in touch between meetings via Slack. 

For more information please contact Emanuela Yeung (eyeung@psy.ku.dk

Navigating the Submission Process for the Jean Piaget Society Conference: A Guide for Emerging Scholars

Interested in submitting to JPS in Toronto but not sure about how to navigate the process? Check out our Webinar from November 16th, 2023, where we provide an overview of how to navigate the conference submission process for emerging scholars!  

 Emerging Scholar Awards

Please see our Awards Page for more details.

 

Pete Pufall Travel Awards

We are pleased to offer two travel awards of $550 each, plus free conference registration, to two Emerging Scholars. These awards are made possible by a generous gift of the Pufall Family. Awards are granted to the highest ranking proposals from Emerging Scholars, with at least one being from a low/middle income country. To be considered for the award, please nominate yourself when you submit your presentation proposal for the annual meeting. Awards will be announced prior to the conference, and monies will be received by awardees at the annual meeting. Emerging Scholars receiving the award, and their presentations, will be highlighted in the program.

NOTE: To be eligible, the first author (presenting author) must be a graduate student or post-doctoral fellow.

Jean Piaget Society Doctoral Dissertation Prize 

According to the deed establishing the prize, its purpose is to “encourage a new generation of scholars to pursue empirical and theoretical studies of children’s construction of knowledge by integrating insights from developmental epistemology, biology, psychology, evolutionary theory and education. To that end, this prize will be awarded to a new scholar who will deliver at an annual meeting of the Jean Piaget Society an address based upon her or his dissertation on an historical, epistemological or empirical subject. The prize will be given to the submission that best continues the spirit of Piaget – a study grounded in a firm knowledge of, but not limited to, the work of Piaget and Inhelder.”

Any doctoral dissertation originating from any country, from psychology, philosophy, education, history of science, evolutionary biology or related fields that concerns the topic of knowledge and its development will be considered. Empirical work, rigorous demonstrations of educational methods, epistemology, historical analysis of ideas, evolutionary theory or explorations of Piaget and Inhelder’s late process theory are some examples of the topics that may be submitted. The quality of the work will be paramount: the work need not have originated from the point of view of Piagetian theory, but knowledge of the theory should be demonstrated in the winning submission, to help explain how the work furthers the ongoing study of the interdependence of knowledge and development.

The mission of the prize is not to look backwards but to promote exciting new discoveries – discoveries that recognize that the study of the development of knowledge begun by Piaget, Inhelder, and their many collaborators is a living, continuing tradition that reverberates in many rich and surprising ways through many disciplines.

The prize consists of $2000 plus reimbursement of reasonable travel costs and meeting registration fees, and will be given to the most outstanding summary submitted to the prize committee of a dissertation completed and approved within the 24 months preceding the deadline for submission to the annual symposium meetings of the Jean Piaget Society.

Eligibility

A candidate must be a student, student member, postdoctoral researcher or new regular member of the Society for the current or upcoming year. Nonmembers may submit for the prize, but they must pay nonmember conference registration fees by the conference date. (A nonmember’s conference registration includes a one-year membership.)

Submission Rules

All materials submitted to the prize committee, and the presentation at the conference, must be in English, although the original dissertation may be in any language.

Candidates must follow the regular procedures to submit to the JPS conference a work based upon their dissertations completed and approved in the 24 months preceding the submission deadline. The submission   may be submitted either as a stand-alone paper or as a part of a symposium. In addition, candidates must submit to the prize committee an abstract of the dissertation not to exceed 2000 words. Send submissions to: Larry Nucci, JPS Prize Committee Chair: nucci@berkeley.edu.

The prize committee will consider only applicants whose papers have been accepted for the conference. The committee will first judge the submissions blind based on the 2000-word abstract. Approximately three submissions will be chosen as finalists. Then, to ensure that the doctoral dissertation is a completed work, and to facilitate judging its importance, finalists will be asked on short notice to submit the following to the prize committee:

  1. A pdf of the completed dissertation
  2. A pdf of a signed signature page for the final approved document;
  3. One letter of recommendation from someone who has read the entire dissertation (preferably a doctoral dissertation advisor or another dissertation committee member) to help the committee judge the significance of the work in the context of its discipline;
  4. A brief curriculum vitae of the candidate, to evaluate the place of the work in the totality of his or her work to date.

 

Upon receipt of the requested information from the finalists the committee will decide upon the winner of the prize.

 

The abstract submitted for the prize must be suitable for a 20-minute presentation at the Jean Piaget Society meeting. It may be accompanied by figures, tables, and some references on a maximum of ten PowerPoint slides. Submissions with no references will not be considered. Minor revisions in the winning paper will be permitted before it is presented.

 

The due date for submissions for the prize will be the same as the due date for submission of abstracts for the Society’s annual conference, The winner, finalists and other applicants will be notified of their final statuses around the time of conference acceptance in February.

 

The winning submission will be noted as such in the conference program next to the slot for its presentation. The program will also mention the winner and the other finalists along with the titles of their dissertations and the names of their doctoral institutions.

 

Questions/submissions should be directed to Larry Nucci, Awards Committee Chair: nucci@berkeley.edu

JPS Early Career Award in Developmental Science

The Jean Piaget Society (JPS) seeks nominations for a newly established Early Career Award in Developmental Science. Recognizing individuals’ different career trajectories, nominees must be within 10 years of receiving their Ph.D. Nominations should include a CV and a nomination letter of 2-4 pages describing the nominee’s work, including its coherence and broader impact on the field, as well as a statement regarding how the nominee’s work connects to the mission and aims of JPS. The letter also should describe the nominee’s involvement in the Jean Piaget Society (e.g., membership in the Society and attendance and presentations at annual meetings). Either self-nominations or nominations by others familiar with the nominee’s work are acceptable. The winner will be invited to attend and present at talk at the conference.

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