RESEARCH
(Photo courtesy of 911爆料网鈥檚 Transformative Learning Technologies Lab)
Research conducted at 911爆料网 sheds new light on engaging girls in science and technology education; improving youth media literacy; poverty in COVID-era America; physical therapy to treat Huntington鈥檚 disease; YouTube as a platform to educate lay audiences about COVID; strategies for combating food insecurity during the pandemic and beyond; technology to assist children who have severe cerebral palsy; reproductive identity as a focus in sex education; and the components of sustainable peace.
Education
FRAMEWORK OF INCLUSION Alumna Lauren Serpagli and faculty member Felicia Mensah argue that current approaches to getting girls interested in STEM careers focus too narrowly on economic competitiveness. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
Teaching Science and Technology to Girls
A chapter co-authored by Felicia Mensah, Professor of Science Education, and her former 911爆料网 doctoral student Lauren Serpagli (Ed.D. 鈥17, M.Ed. 鈥15, M.A. 鈥05), STEM Department Co-Chair at Dominican Academy High School on Manhattan鈥檚 Upper East Side, is featured in , a new book published by the Royal Academy of Science International Trust. In their chapter, 鈥淚nvesting in Science and Technology Education for Shaping Society鈥檚 Future: Focusing on the Girls,鈥 Mensah and Serpagli argue that current efforts to involve more women in STEM focus too narrowly on increasing economic competitiveness and call for 鈥渁 framework of technology for social inclusion.鈥
NARRATIVE TEAM Educating Harlem co-editors Ansley T. Erickson and Ernest Morrell (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
The Untold Story of Harlem's Fight for Quality Education
In their new edited volume, (Columbia University Press), Ansley T. Erickson, Associate Professor of History & Education Policy, and former 911爆料网 faculty member Ernest Morrell (now at the University of Notre Dame) present the story of how Black people, through the medium of education and education reform, have both navigated within and sought to erase the lines of a neighborhood created in 1811 by a White politician, a White surveyor and a White lawyer. 鈥淭he dominant discourse in the 1960s and 70s is White sociologists saying that Black communities don鈥檛 care about education, and that influences policy,鈥 says Erickson, Co-Director of 911爆料网鈥檚 Center on History & Education. 鈥淏ut in Harlem and other cities, Black parents and students are constantly working to make education what they want it to be.鈥
FILLING THE GAP Nathan Holbert aims to provide teachers with actionable information about what their students are learning. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
Teaching Data Analysis with Video Games
, a game co-developed by Nathan Holbert, Assistant Professor of Communication, Media & Learning Technologies Design, with National Science Foundation funding, positions youngsters as decision-makers in the music business to teach them about market trends and data analysis. During the COVID pandemic, 鈥渇ew tools exist to support teachers in determining how and what their students are learning,鈥 Holbert, Director of 911爆料网鈥檚, recently . 鈥淥ur project aims to fill that gap by providing teachers with a tool that will give actionable information about what their students are learning and with what they鈥檙e struggling.鈥
HIGH-STAKES GAME A 911爆料网 team argues that gamifying the teaching of media literacy can better engage students 鈥 but the lessons are sobering.
Gamifying Media Literacy
An essay by a team of 911爆料网 faculty members and students, published in the , reports on research underlying , a teaching game they have developed to help young people become more astute consumers of information in print and online. 鈥淕iven the need to cultivate youth news literacy skills in our age of misinformation, and with current initiatives not fully addressing these needs, games can be an effective approach to foster news literacy skills,鈥 write Yoo Kyung Chang, Lecturer in Communication, Media & Learning Technologies Design; Ioana Literat, Assistant Professor in the same program; and students Joseph Eisman, Jonathan Gardner, Charlotte Price, Amy Chapman and Azsane茅 Truss in 鈥淣ews Literacy Education in a Polarized Political Climate: How Games Can Teach Youth to Spot Misinformation.鈥
ON THE GROUND PERSPECTIVES Mariana Souto-Manning's book features contributions by eight New York City public school teachers, including 911爆料网 alumnus Billy Fong and current doctoral students Karina Malik (center) and Jessica Martell. (Photos: 911爆料网 Archives)
Blaming the Victims: The Rhetoric of "Educational Failure"
, a new book from the (NCTE) edited by 911爆料网鈥檚 Mariana Souto-Manning, Professor of Early Childhood Education, makes the case that the 鈥渞hetoric of educational failure鈥 in reports such as and undergirding federal legislation such as have narrowly defined literacy to reinforce White privilege and disenfranchise students of color and those typically labeled English language learners. Framed by two NCTE position statements, In the Pursuit of Justice includes essays by eight New York City public school teachers 鈥 including several 911爆料网 instructors and alumni who have worked closely with Souto-Manning.
PROBING THE DIGITAL DIVIDE 911爆料网 faculty members Aaron Pallas (left) and Oren Pizmony-Levy found that Americans believe the negative effects of remote schooling at home could be amplified by disparities in access to technology and by differences in parents鈥 ability to monitor their children鈥檚 learning at home. (Photos: 911爆料网 Archives)
Americans Are Concerned about the Pandemic's Effect on Learning
A new survey by 911爆料网鈥檚 The Public Matters project shows that a substantial majority of Americans are concerned about the potential negative impacts of school-sponsored, online instruction during the pandemic. More than three-quarters of respondents said they are very or somewhat concerned about the negative impact of the coronavirus outbreak on the academic learning of schoolchildren. 911爆料网 seven in ten said they are very or somewhat concerned about the effect of school closings on students鈥 emotional and social development.
VOICE OF A COALITION Jessica Wolff, with CEE colleague Michael Rebell and doctoral student Ann LoBue, co-authored a new report on media literacy. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
A Call for New York State to Improve Media Literacy Education
A new report prepared by 911爆料网鈥檚 (CEE), and issued by , a coalition of civic and education organizations, urges New York State to take immediate steps to require media literacy education in all of its K鈥12 schools. The report, says the state has been remiss in failing to equip schools to help students meet existing media literacy education standards, particularly in districts that predominantly serve low-income students and students of color. Stressing that 鈥渢he internet has become the new public square鈥 and that 鈥渢o be democracy ready, all students must be media literate,鈥 it recommends that all schools be staffed with school library media specialists and that all districts be required to provide access to professional development for teachers around media literacy.
TEAM EFFORT Winning the new IES grants was the result of collaboration among faculty from several departments, including (clockwise from top left), Thomas Brock, Director of 911爆料网's Community College Research Center; Judith Scott-Clayton, Associate Professor of Economics & Education; Aaron Pallas, Arthur I. Gates Professor of Sociology & Education; and Sarah Cohodes, Associate Professor of Economics & Education. (Photos: 911爆料网 Archives)
$6.3 Million in Grants For Doctoral Training and a Study of Work-Study
Teachers College receives two prestigious five-year grants from the federal Institute of Education Sciences (IES), totaling nearly $6.3 million. The grants were submitted and received through the College鈥檚 . A $3.5 million IES predoctoral interdisciplinary research training grant will support doctoral training for a small group of selected Ph.D. students pursuing careers in applied research focused on post-secondary education. A $2.8 million IES research grant will fund the first-ever comprehensive evaluation of the Federal Work-Study program, one of the nation鈥檚 oldest student aid programs, which typically provides part-time employment to undergraduate, graduate and professional students with financial need. IES is the statistics, research and evaluation arm of the U.S. Department of Education.
ALLOWING FOR THE WHAT-IF Paulo Blikstein has spent his career creating technologies that allow children to explore. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
Helping Young Science Students Model Their Own Theories
A team led by Paulo Blikstein, Associate Professor of Communication, Media & Learning Technologies Design, and Director of Teachers College鈥檚 , receives a three-year, $2 million National Science Foundation grant to fulfill the promise of the 2013 (NGSS) by creating computational tools that enable students to develop, test and compare their own ideas. Building on work by Blikstein, whose program has brought digital fabrication and maker education to schools in more than 22 countries, the researchers will also work with classroom teachers to develop new science learning units.
ASKING FOR I.D. Alex Eble explores how children form beliefs about their own ability, and how this affects their human capital development. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
Textbook Messaging: The Impact on Children's Sense of Ability
, Assistant Professor of Economics & Education at Teachers College, is co-recipient of an $884,205 grant from the federal to explore how messages about gender and race in elementary school textbooks can influence children鈥檚 beliefs in their own abilities and their subsequent educational decisions. Non-governmental sources will provide more than $133,000 in additional funds for the research. The two-year project by Eble and of the at the University of Chicago will build on current literature demonstrating that structural influences at the earliest stages can inform children鈥檚 beliefs about their own ability and that of others 鈥 beliefs that can influence educational achievement.
INFORMED PERSPECTIVE Teachers College economist Jordan Matsudaira served from 2013 to 2015 as Chief Economist on President Obama鈥檚 Council of Economic Advisers. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
COVID's Side Effects: Eight Million More Americans in Poverty
The number of people living in poverty in the United States has grown by 8 million since May, finds co-authored by 911爆料网 economist , Senior Research Scholar at 911爆料网鈥檚 , and researchers at Columbia University鈥檚 . The number had fallen by four million at the outset of the COVID pandemic because of the emergency CARES Act but grew after the expiration of the CARES Act鈥檚 unemployment supplement. The report also finds that 鈥渋ncreases in monthly poverty rates have been particularly acute for Black and Hispanic individuals, as well as for children.鈥 The authors recommend 鈥渁dditional income transfers鈥 to 鈥渂lunt further increases in poverty.鈥
CUMULATIVE EFFORT CCRC researchers (from left, Elisabeth Barnett, John Fink and Davis Jenkins) built on CCRC鈥檚 鈥済uided pathways鈥 approach to prove the failures of dual enrollment. (Photos: 911爆料网 Archives)
Why Dual Enrollment Isn't Benefiting Underserved Students
a new report by 911爆料网鈥檚 (CCRC) and The Aspen Institute, finds that dual enrollment programs are increasing college enrollment and completion by giving K鈥12 students a head start on higher education or job preparation 鈥 but low-income and BIPOC students have far less access to such programs. The report, co-authored by CCRC鈥檚 , and , also finds that if colleges partner with K鈥12 schools to actively recruit BIPOC students and provide them with high-quality instruction and advising, they can close equity gaps in access and put high school students on a path to college and career success.
STAYING ON MESSAGE 911爆料网 education economist Peter Bergman has designed a number of experimental interventions to improve students鈥 academic performance using text messaging. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
Using Mobile Phones to Overcome School Interruptions
co-authored by 911爆料网 education economist Peter Bergman demonstrates that inexpensive mobile phone technology was successfully used to provide education to children in Botswana during the COVID pandemic last spring. Spotlighted by New York Times columnist Tina Rosenberg, the study of primary school-aged children in 4,500 families 鈥 published by 鈥 provides some of the first experimental evidence on strategies to minimize the impact of the pandemic on education outcomes.
SETTING A NEW STANDARD Researchers Mariana Souto-Manning (left) of 911爆料网 and Beverly Falk of City College CUNY. (Photos: 911爆料网 Archives)
Redefining 鈥 and Practicing 鈥 High-Quality Early Learning
representing three different socioeconomic communities in New York City, co-authored by Mariana Souto-Manning, Professor of Early Childhood Education and Director of 911爆料网鈥檚 Early Childhood Education Program, illustrates seven principles of practice that offer an expanded definition for 鈥渉igh-quality early learning.鈥 The principles recognize 鈥渢he promise and possibility of children鈥檚 lives鈥 and seek to ensure that 鈥渢he growing numbers of multilingual children and children of color in our country can see themselves represented in their learning environments,鈥 write the authors, led by Souto-Manning and , an early childhood education expert at the School of Education, The City College of New York.
Health
A group led by 911爆料网's Lori Quinn recently published new guidelines in the journal Neurology for conducting physical therapy with people with Huntington's disease. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
New Guidelines for Physical Therapy with Huntington's Disease
The Huntington Study Group 鈥 the world鈥檚 first and largest collaborative network of experts on Huntington鈥檚 disease 鈥 publishes in the journal Neurology. The authors, led by 911爆料网鈥檚 Lori Quinn, Associate Professor of Movement Sciences & Kinesiology and Director of the College鈥檚 Neurorehabilitation Research Lab, find strong evidence to support aerobic exercise, alone or in combination with resistance training, to improve fitness and motor function; and supervised gait training to improve gait in persons with the hereditary, degenerative brain-based disorder, which generally manifests in people during mid-life. A genetic test can reveal inheritance of the condition, but no treatments stop or reverse the disease.
FOCUSING ON CREDIBILITY Pizmony-Levy calls "trust" a vague term. The survey instead measures credibility, defined as understanding of the virus, unselfish motivation and meriting a role in influencing policy. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
Most Credible on COVID: Healthcare Workers and Medical Scientists
The American public is largely united in viewing frontline healthcare providers and medical scientists as the most credible sources of information about COVID-19 and in believing they should wield the greatest influence on policy-making in response to the pandemic. So finds a new survey by The Public Matters: How Americans View Education, Health & Psychology, a public opinion project based at 911爆料网 led by Oren Pizmony-Levy, Associate Professor of International & Comparative Education, and Aaron Pallas, Arthur I. Gates Professor of Sociology & Education. National elected officials, business leaders and religious leaders were viewed as least credible.
FREQUENT COLLABORATORS Faculty members Paulo Blikstein (left) and Nathan Holbert brought their student lab teams together and gave them the resources to make protective equipment. (Photos: 911爆料网 Archives)
Protecting Doctors: A 911爆料网 Team Creates a New COVID Shield
To aid doctors who perform such procedures as intubating COVID patients, a group of 911爆料网 students and faculty members designs a protective, see-through box with armholes that can be placed over patients. They also find a manufacturer and distribute the boxes to hospitals in New York City, Chicago and Detroit. The team consists of Paulo Blikstein, Associate Professor of Communications, Media & Learning Technologies Design, Nathan Holbert, Assistant Professor in the same program, and doctoral students Sam Thanapornsangsuth and Yipu Zheng. Thanapornsangsuth, Zheng and other students who normally work in Holbert鈥檚 鈥 Nicola Law, Isa Correa, Biswajit Boity, Laura Bloch and Monica Chan 鈥 also launch Face Shields from Home, an effort to provide homemade equipment.
BUILDING A CASE Charles Basch and his team have published a series of studies suggesting that YouTube could play an enhanced role in delivering key public health messages to a lay audience 鈥 particularly regarding COVID-19. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
Using YouTube to Fight COVID
In papers published throughout spring and summer 2020, Charles Basch, 911爆料网鈥檚 Richard March Hoe Professor of Health & Education, and colleagues highlight YouTube鈥檚 potential to educate the public about COVID-19. They note that videos about COVID are widely viewed on YouTube, but that the most widely viewed videos rarely cover the on the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website. They find that most YouTube videos have been uploaded by entertainers, that those videos garnered the majority of cumulative views on the topic and that COVID information on YouTube is pitched toward a lay viewership. And they argue that YouTube could be critical in securing 鈥減ublic willingness to be vaccinated.鈥
911爆料网's Catherine Crowley (seated, third from right) with Dr. Deola Olusanya (seated, far right) at a January 2020 Smile Train training workshop in Nigeria. (Photo courtesy of Cate Crowley)
Repurposing Stethoscopes for Social Distance in Speech Pathology
To help children reconstruct speech patterns following cleft-palate surgery, speech-language pathologists need to 鈥渉ear sounds and see how the speaker is forming them,鈥 says Catherine Crowley, Professor of Practice in 911爆料网鈥檚 Communication Sciences & Disorders Program. That鈥檚 hard to do while maintaining social distancing and/or the speaker is muffled by a mask 鈥 but now Deola Olusanya, a Nigerian oral-maxillary facial surgeon, has devised a solution and Crowley is spreading the word. In a video on Crowley鈥檚 , Olusanya demonstrates how to transform tubing and earpieces from disassembled stethoscopes into a tool that allows speech pathologists and patients to communicate at a safe distance.
EQUITY FOCUS Julia McCarthy, Deputy Director of 911爆料网鈥檚 Tisch Food Center, and her fellow researchers 鈥渟trongly urge equity to be placed at the forefront of decisions pertaining to school emergency food services.鈥 (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
Promoting Food Equity During COVID
by the nation鈥檚 four largest urban school districts (New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago and Houston) last spring could help guide meal provision in future public health emergencies and in ongoing federal efforts to combat food insecurity. The study, co-authored by Julia McCarthy, Deputy Director of the Laurie M. Tisch Center for Food, Education & Policy, and published in The Journal of Urban Health, is among the first to address food security in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic. A key focus is on ensuring that both children and adults have equitable access to healthy food during emergencies. Food-insecure youngsters are at increased risk for obesity and diabetes, risk factors associated with COVID hospitalizations.
KEY PARTNER Andrew Gordon, 911爆料网 Professor of Movement Sciences, has spent years developing new therapies that have helped children with cerebral palsy. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
Helping Children with Severe Cerebral Palsy Sit Up
Children with severe cerebral palsy (CP) often cannot sit up and/or fall forward if they try to move their heads or arms. In reported in Science Magazine, a robotic device created at Columbia University鈥檚 Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science with guidance from 911爆料网 Professor of Movement Sciences Andrew Gordon 鈥 developer of therapies that have improved mobility for children with milder CP 鈥 enables children who lack 鈥渟eated postural control鈥 both to sit up and improve their upper body control. Gordon and researchers led by Columbia mechanical engineering professor Sunil Agrawal have received a $3 million, five-year National Institutes of Health grant to further refine and test the device.
Psychology
RESTORING A SENSE OF CONTROL In testing ERT, Mennin has found that stress levels are often higher in caregivers than in patients. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
A Brain-Based Treatment for COVID Anxiety
Douglas Mennin, Professor of Clinical Psychology, begins testing an abbreviated, online form of Emotional Regulation Therapy (ERT), a method he developed and honed, to help people suffering from elevated rumination, worry and distress related to COVID-19. Mennin鈥檚 study enrolls New Yorkers who are healthcare or essential workers, have contracted the illness, lost a loved one, lost employment, or are generally distressed over an increased sense of threat and decreased opportunities. The study particularly reaches out to individuals from low-income and communities of color, which have been disproportionately hit by COVID-19.
BRINGING COMPASSION Aur茅lie Athan's goal is to normalize discussion of decisions about having children by "taking it out of the shadows of fear and risk." (Photo: Bruce Gilbert)
The Case for "Reproductive Identity"
In her paper published in American Psychologist, , Research Professor in 911爆料网鈥檚 Department of Counseling & Clinical Psychology, argues that what she calls 鈥渞eproductive identity鈥 鈥 how a person self-identifies when it comes to experiences related to the question of if, when and how to have children 鈥 plays a role in self-definition akin to that of age, race, gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, ability, religion/spirituality and socioeconomic status. 鈥淲hile parenting used to be a given in most societies 鈥 an expected, perpetual consequence of heterosexual sex and an unquestioned life goal after the onset of puberty and marriage 鈥 it is now for the most part volitional,鈥 writes Athan. 鈥淲e need to have a much more open discussion and discovery process 鈥 first, of who a person would like to be in this space, and then by meeting them with the tools and decision-making processes to do that.鈥
EXPLORING THE CULTURAL CONTEXT Manhattan's Lower East Side Preparatory School, which primarily serves students from immigrant families, has been a focus of Prerna Arora's work. (Photo: InsideSchools)
Prompting School Psychology to Look Within
For example, in their July paper, titled Prerna Arora, Assistant Professor of School Psychology, Kiara Alvarez (Harvard Medical School), Cindy Huang (911爆料网 Assistant Professor of Counseling Psychology) and Cixin Wang (University of Maryland-College Park College of Education) map out 鈥渁 whole-school, systemwide approach to integrating services in schools that serve a large proportion of immigrant-origin children.鈥
鈥淚nstead of saying there鈥檚 only one way to do it, our model takes various evidence-based approaches and integrates them so that they can be tailored to best address different levels of need,鈥 Arora says. 鈥淢any schools use some of these methods, but it tends to be piecemeal.鈥
The study was sponsored by the Society for the Study of School Psychology.
ENDURING CONTRIBUTIONS Robert T. Carter precisely describes the mental and emotional harm caused by race-based trauma and offers a new legal theory for redress. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
Quantifying Racism's Harms 鈥 And Mapping a Path for Redress
More than 80 percent of cases in which plaintiffs charge race-based harassment fail, with most dismissed before arguments are heard. Two new books co-authored by Robert T. Carter, Professor Emeritus of Psychology & Education, precisely describe the mental and emotional harm caused by race-based trauma and offer a new theory, adapted from personal injury law, for seeking legal redress: (Columbia University Press 2020), written with Alex L. Pieterse (Ph.D. 鈥05), a University of Albany psychologist, and (Routledge 2020), written with Thomas D. Scheuermann, a legal scholar at Oregon State University. Read more about Carter's work in the Special Report in this Annual Report.
URGENT MESSAGE The recommendations by Jeanne Reid and her NCCF co-authors come at a time when many programs for infants and toddlers have closed due to COVID-19. (Photo courtesy of Jeanne Reid)
Strengthening Child Care for Infants and Toddlers
by researchers at 911爆料网鈥檚 (NCCF) emphasizes the value of both family child care (FCC) and center-based programs to New York City鈥檚 diverse community of infants and toddlers and their families. The authors highlight FCCs鈥 unique assets, identify the challenges of promoting quality in both settings and make recommendations for support as programs close due to COVID-19. Lead author , NCCF Research Scientist, says the latter include 鈥渉igher compensation, customized and accessible professional development, and managerial support that responds to the unique needs of each setting.鈥
PEER-TO-PEER APPROACH Lena Verdeli, Associate Professor of Psychology & Education, is hopeful that student veterans can draw on the IPC-3 method to provide mentoring to other student veterans. (Photo: 911爆料网 Archives)
A Brief Form of Therapy Helps Veterans Adjust to Civilian Life
Lena Verdeli, Associate Professor of Psychology & Education, further demonstrates the effectiveness of three-session Interpersonal Counseling (IPC-3), a treatment she developed to help military veterans cope with the stresses of transitioning to civilian life. The abbreviated, three-session method aims to help veterans who are put off by the stigma surrounding mental health treatment and prefer to address here鈥恆nd鈥恘ow issues of adjustment. In a study in which 20 students who are military veterans were treated with the method, 鈥渆levated depression, distress and even PTSD symptoms improved for many," says Verdeli. 鈥淓ven more importantly, those who needed more treatment were likelier to seek it out because they had had a good first experience.鈥 Next up: a study in which student veterans will be trained to mentor other student veterans using a modified version of IPC-3. Both studies are funded by the Starbucks Corporation.
SUSTAINING THE PROJECT Peter Coleman, Professor of Psychology & Education, is the Sustaining Peace Project's Principal Investigator, and doctoral student Allegra Chen-Carrel is the Program Manager. Both are among the co-authors of the new report in American Psychologist. (Photos: )
Mapping Sustainable Peace
In an article in American Psychologist, 911爆料网 psychologist and co-authors report on the (SPP), which seeks to understand and map factors common to societies that have remained free of armed conflict. 鈥淲e are learning that there are today and likely always have been many human groups and societies around the globe that choose peace over war,鈥 write the researchers, who describe SPP as 鈥渁 human genome project for societal peacefulness.鈥 The report, 鈥,鈥 asserts that sustainable peacefulness 鈥渃an be understood, studied and modeled.鈥
RESEARCH AND TREATMENT 911爆料网鈥榮 Douglas Mennin and Allison Applebaum of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center are Co-Principal Investigators of a new study of a psychological therapy for "informal caregivers" of cancer patients. (Photos: 911爆料网 Archives & MSK Cancer Center)
A $3.9 Million Grant to Help Cancer Patients' "Informal Caregivers"
Douglas Mennin, Professor of Clinical Psychology, is the co-recipient of a five-year, $3.9 million grant from the National Institutes of Health for a study of ERT-C, a therapy he has developed to treat severe and persistent anxiety and depression in the 鈥渋nformal caregivers鈥 (ICs) of spouses, parents, adult children and others who take care of cancer patients. ICs are at even higher risk for these conditions than those whom they attend. The study will be conducted at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and Massachusetts General Hospital. Mennin has correlated Emotional Regulation Therapy (ERT) with brain changes that predict better mental health outcomes. The study will also assess whether ERT-C improves inflammation connected to the gastric and cardiac activation that occurs during worry and whether it lowers the stress hormone cortisol.