Senior Researcher, SRI Education
Jennifer Nakamura specializes in mixed methods formative research and evaluation studies of education programs in preK–12 schools. Her areas of expertise include digital learning platforms, support for students with disabilities, early literacy and tiered systems of support. Her goal in her work is to contribute to the development and evaluation of strong learning products and platforms that are designed with students, educators and families at the forefront.
At SRI, Nakamura leads research studies funded by the U.S. Department of Education’s Institute of Education Sciences (IES). She is currently the research co-lead for an IES grant to develop and evaluate Amira for Families, a personalized intervention designed to strengthen home–school connections around early literacy. In partnership with Amira Learning, the research team is engaging in a co-design process with parents and educators, conducting a short-cycle feasibility study of the program in school settings and executing an experimental evaluation of the program in first-grade classrooms. Nakamura is also the research co-lead for an IES Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant that includes partnering with Alchemie Solutions to develop Kasi, an online system that increases the accessibility of chemistry content to high school-age students who are blind or have low vision. She was previously the research co-lead on another SBIR grant to develop and evaluate Sound Town, an adaptive early literacy program targeting phonemic awareness in prekindergarten children.
Nakamura is skilled at translating research for practitioners. She has published numerous blog posts about her research and evidence-based educational practices. She has also co-authored technical reports on rigorous evaluations of digital learning programs, a peer-reviewed Regional Educational Laboratory (REL) research report on states’ approaches to measuring response to intervention and multi-tiered systems of support and a book chapter on effective instruction as the basis for classroom management in the Handbook of Classroom Management (3rd ed.). She regularly presents at national conferences, including the American Educational Research Association, the Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness and the National Research Conference on Early Childhood. Before joining SRI, Nakamura supported children and families in various roles both within and outside of the school system. She was a school psychologist intern in Manassas City Public Schools, a qualified mental health professional at Health Connect America, a learning strategist for the Mason Autism Support Initiative and a clinician at a Lindamood-Bell Learning Center. Nakamura earned a certificate of advanced graduate study in school psychology, an MA in school psychology and a BS in psychology from George Mason University.
Key projects
- Reading Together: Building family literacy through AI-enabled tutoring, U.S. Department of Education Institute of Education Sciences
- Kasi Learning System: Accessible Science Diagrams through Multisensory Augmented Reality, Small Business Innovation Research Phase II, U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences
- Interactive Audio Technology to Build Phonological Awareness and Early Childhood Literacy, Small Business Innovation Research Phase II, U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences
- Tools for Getting Along Effectiveness Study, U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences
- Formative Research to Support Sesame Workshop and UnitedHealthcare’s Healthy Habits Initiative
Recent publications
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Sound Town Evaluation Report
Digital learning programs are a promising tool to support teachers in providing students with strong early literacy instruction, but more research is needed to understand their effectiveness. This report describes…
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Maine Early Childhood Consultation Partnership® (ECCP®) Pilot Final Report
SRI Education conducted an evaluation of a pilot implementation of an evidence-based, manualized model of infant and early childhood mental health consultation (IECMHC) that builds capacity of the early care…
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Early Childhood Throughout the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Experiences of Arkansas Educators
This brief, which represents the second of two reports, highlights findings from a second sample of Arkansas (AR) educators who completed surveys and focus groups in spring 2021.
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Early Childhood Education During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Experiences of Arkansas Educators
SRI International and the National Center on Children in Poverty collected information on how Arkansas early care providers are implementing state COVID-19-related guidelines and coping with the challenges related to…
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Supporting students experiencing trauma during the COVID-19 pandemic
Through this work, the collaborative developed and curated tools and strategies all educators may find useful when supporting students during this time.
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Virginia Early Childhood Foundation Local Early Childhood Systems Building Strategy Map and Indicators
This document describes the Virginia Early Childhood Foundation’s (VECF) strategy map.
Other publications
- Scott, T. & Nakamura, J. (2022). Effective instruction as the basis for classroom management. In Sabornie, E. J., & Espelage, D. L., (Eds.), Handbook of classroom management (Third Edition) (pp. 15–30). Routledge.