Faculty and Staff

Katie Goodall, PhD

Katie Goodall, PhD



Title
Dean
Location
Beverly, Massachusetts
Pronouns
She/Her/Hers
Education
Ph.D. in Plant and Soil Science
University of Vermont (VT, USA)
M.S. in Natural Resources and Environment, Graduate Certificate in Latin American & Caribbean Studies
University of Michigan (MI, USA)
SFS Alumna
Kenya Spring ‘01
B.S. in Environmental Studies & Spanish
Washington University in St. Louis (MO, USA)
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about

Profile

I joined the Office of Academic Affairs at The School for Field Studies in early 2017. Prior to joining SFS, I was a faculty member in the Environmental Studies Program at Wellesley College, where I taught courses on food systems, tropical agroecology, botany, and writing. Much of my teaching utilized examples from Latin America, where my research is based.  I also have experience researching and developing innovative pedagogies and effective student evaluations for the sciences. While at Wellesley, I initiated the Science Pedagogy Working Group, an affinity group for faculty interested in innovative pedagogy, sharing resources, and rethinking how we approach science education more generally.

My experience in SFS-Kenya ’01 started me on my career path investigating human-environment relationships using transdisciplinary approaches. My research and teaching interests include agroecology, social and environmental justice, participatory action research, innovative science pedagogy, and biodiversity conservation. I received my PhD in Plant and Soil Sciences from the University of Vermont in 2013. For my dissertation research, I collaborated with coffee cooperatives in northern Nicaragua to explore biodiversity conservation and farmer decision making, asking how the ecological landscape interacts with the social landscape across coffee systems. Returning to SFS as the Dean provides the opportunity to work with our faculty on questions regarding agroecological landscapes as well as pedagogical approaches.


Academics & Research

Research Interests

In general, I ask questions about how management decisions respond to and modify ecological and social landscapes. As a doctoral student I investigated management decisions of cooperatively organized coffee farmers in Nicaragua, and the effects of these decisions on shade tree conservation. Using a Participatory Action Research approach, I developed the project in collaboration with producers and cooperative administrators to ensure outcomes useful to the community. Methods included tree surveys and farmer interviews to empirically engage with both natural and social science factors contributing to this complex system. I found that although shade tree densities declined over a ten-year period, species diversity did not. Interviews revealed farmers utilize their social networks to make management decisions, suggesting a tension between a collective value in maintaining tree diversity in the long term and thinning trees to increase yields in the short term. This work contributes to agroecology by identifying the trade-offs facing smallholders who are simultaneously sustaining their own livelihoods through cash crop production, as well as conserving a biodiverse landscape. This work revealed several questions for future research, which I hope to pursue during my time at SFS.

outputs

Publications

El Centro de Estudios sobre Desarrollo Sostenible, un modelo de educación en el extranjero con una huella positiva en Costa Rica

Avalos, G., A. Häger, E. Arévalo, M. Little, & K. Goodall. (2017). El Centro de Estudios sobre Desarrollo Sostenible, un modelo de educación en el extranjero con una huella positiva en Costa Rica. Ambientico 264. (pp 4-12).

Shade tree diversity, carbon sequestration, and epiphyte presence in coffee agroecosystems: A decade of smallholder management in San Ramón, Nicaragua.

Goodall, K., C. M. Bacon, and V.E. Mendez. 2015. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 199(2015), 200-206.

Extending the timeframe for rapid response and best management practices of flood-dispersed Japanese knotweed (Fallopia japonica).

Colleran, B. and K. Goodall. 2015. Invasive Plant Science and Management.

In situ growth and rapid response management of flood dispersed Japanese knotweed (Fallopia japonica).

Colleran, B. and K. Goodall. 2014. Invasive Plant Science and Management 7(1), 84-92.

Agroecology and Alternative Agri-Food Movements in the United States: Toward a Sustainable Agri-Food System.

Fernandez, M., K. Goodall, M. Olson, and V. E. Méndez. 2012. Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems 37, 115–126.

Livelihood and environmental trade-offs of climate mitigation in smallholder coffee agroforestry systems.

Méndez, V. E., S. Castro-Tanzi, K. Goodall, K.S. Morris, C.M. Bacon, P. Läderach, P., W.B. Morris and M.U. Georgeoglou-Laxalde. 2012. Pp. 370-381. In E. K. Wollenberg, A. Nihart, M. Grieg-Gran & M. L. Tapio- Biström (Eds.) Climate mitigation and agriculture. London: Earthscan

Presentations

Lessons from the tropics: Balancing farmer livelihoods and conservation in smallholder coffee agroecosystems

Goodall, K. 2016. Panel member for session Novel Agroecosystems: Using Biodiversity to Enhance Food Production and Ecosystem Services in Perennial Polycultures. Ecological Society of America, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, August.

El balance entre la autonomía y la solidaridad para la conservación de la biodiversidad en el agroecosistema de café

Goodall, K. 2015. V International Conference of Agroecology, Sustainable Agriculture and Cooperativism. Güira de Melena, Cuba, November.

Invited participant in Taller Mesoamericano Sobre Monitoreo de Biodiversidad en Producción Rural Sostenible

Goodall, K. 2015 (Mesoamerican Workshop on Biodiversity Monitoring in Rural Sustainable Agriculture). Turrialba, Costa Rica, November.

Balancing autonomy and solidarity for biodiversity conservation in the coffeelands

Goodall, K. 2015. University of Michigan Food Sovereignty Conference. Ann Arbor, Michigan, May.

Tracking Trees and Defining Inputs: A transdisciplinary approach to coffee agroecosystem analysis

Goodall, K. 2015. Panel member for session Agrarian Change in the Coffeelands: Methods for Livelihoods, Gender, Agroecology, and Food Security. Association for American Geographers, Chicago. Illinois, April.

Just Coffee: Balancing autonomy and solidarity for biodiversity conservation in the coffeelands

Goodall, K. 2015. Just Food? Forum for Justice in the Food System, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, March.

Growth and Control of Flood-dispersed Japanese Knotweed (Fallopia japonica) in the Wake of Tropical Storm Irene

Colleran, B. and K. Goodall. 2014. Northeast Natural History Conference, Springfield, Massachusetts, April.

Patterns of biodiversity and farmer decision making in cooperatively managed coffee agroecosystems of Nicaragua

Goodall, K. 2013. Interdisciplinary PhD Workshop in Sustainable Development, Columbia University, New York, New York, April.

Intensificación e Infestación: el manejo de cafetales y los ectoparásitos de aves en Chiapas, México

Goodall, K. 2008. XI Congreso de la Sociedad Mesoamericana de Biología y Conservación, San Salvador, El Salvador, November.

Intensification and Infestation: agricultural management and avian ectoparasites in Chiapas, México

Goodall, K. 2008. Early Career Scientists Symposium, Ann Arbor, Michigan, March.

Intensificación de cafetales y ectoparásitos de aves en Chiapas, México

Goodall, K. 2007. VIII Congress of the Neotropical Ornithological Society, Maturín, Venezuela, May.