Professor Danae L. Hudson, Ph.D., Missouri State University
Danae Hudson is a professor in the Department of Psychology at Missouri State University (MSU). She obtained her bachelor’s degree from Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, and she received her PhD in clinical psychology from Louisiana State University. Her program of research initially focused on eating disorders and body image, but now, the majority of her work involves the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL). Since 2003, Dr. Hudson has taught large sections of Introductory Psychology in addition to other clinical psychology undergraduate and graduate courses.
From 2010-2013, Dr. Hudson served as the team leader for a large-scale redesign of MSU’s Introductory Psychology course. MSU participated in a state-wide initiative in course redesign where each public four-year institution in the state redesigned one large enrollment course. Since Fall 2012, all introductory psychology courses have been taught in the redesigned, blended format. Dr. Hudson and her colleagues have published peer-reviewed articles, case studies, and presented at national and international venues on the successful outcomes of the redesigned course. She has been interviewed by various educational consultants, and Introductory Psychology’s success story has been documented in Campus Technology and on Michael Feldstein’s blog e-Literate. Dr. Hudson served two years as a Provost Fellow for Teaching and Learning at MSU, is currently a Missouri Learning Commons Scholar, and a National Center for Academic Transformation (NCAT) Redesign Scholar. She is also actively involved in APA’s Division 2: Society for the Teaching of Psychology (STP) as the Director of Teaching Resources in Psychology.