Chemistry Educator Completes Doctorate, Secures Professorship in Chemical Education Research

Graduating Doctoral Student Ronia Kattoum is surrounded by her colleagues at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Photo by Ben Krain.
Graduating Doctoral Student Ronia Kattoum is surrounded by her colleagues at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Photo by Ben Krain.

Driven by a lifelong passion for both teaching and scientific inquiry, Dr. Ronia Kattoum has reached a significant milestone in her academic journey. After years of dedication and hard work, the long-time chemistry instructor and single mother of four has successfully earned her doctoral degree in applied sciences-chemistry and accepted a full-time assistant professorship in chemical education research.

After growing up in Palestine, Kattoum moved with her family to Chicago at age 9. She found a love of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) education early in life and earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree in chemistry from Loyola University. She then moved to Arkansas, earning two master鈥檚 degrees in chemistry and higher education from 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock.

In 2014, Kattoum became a valued instructor in the Department of Chemistry, becoming the 2021 recipient of the Faculty Excellence Award in Teaching for the Donaghey College of STEM. Over the years, she served as the freshman programs coordinator and teacher licensure program coordinator, a facilitator for the Mobile Institute on Scientific Teaching (MoSI), as well as helped start the Learning Assistants program with Dr. Mark Baillie, assistant professor of chemistry. It was the introduction of the MoSI workshop that became a game changer for Kattoum.

鈥淚 had already been an instructor for several years when Mark Baillie joined the faculty in 2019 and brought with him the MOSI workshop,鈥 Kattoum said. 鈥淚鈥檝e always experimented with different methodologies to engage my students, but I didn鈥檛 realize there was a science to teaching science. It was really a career changer for me that sparked my interest in working on my Ph.D.鈥

Baillie, her longtime colleague, described Kattoum as a 鈥渢our de force,鈥 who secured more than $40,000 in external funding to support her research, invite speakers to campus, and fund undergraduate researchers. Since she started her doctoral program, she has presented during two international conferences each year and is on track to submit four peer-reviewed publications resulting from her dissertation.

鈥淭he impact of her research has the possibility to broaden the participation of students from historically marginalized groups in STEM, both at 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock and in the entire higher education system in the U.S.,鈥 Baillie said. 鈥淲e at 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock are incredibly proud to have been part of Ronia鈥檚 career journey.鈥

Kattoum began researching discipline-based education research focusing on chemistry education. She completed her dissertation, 鈥淎n Investigation of the Mindset Context and its Downstream Effects on Marginalized Student Outcomes in College STEM Courses鈥 this semester. She completed her doctoral degree while being a single mother of four kids, now ages 9, 14, 16, and 19, who were all excited to see their mom graduate.

鈥淚 was so excited to see my oldest son when he came to my defense,鈥 Kattoum said. 鈥淗e talked about how different it was to see me in action and how well I connected with people. My colleagues told me they saw the pride in his eyes. My parents and other kids watched me on Zoom. It was wonderful to have my kids experience my achievement with me.鈥

This summer Kattoum will be conducting post-doctoral research with her 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock colleagues as well as moving into a new home before starting her new position as an assistant professor and chemistry education researcher at Roosevelt University in Chicago.

鈥淭his is a milestone I鈥檝e been looking forward to for a long time, and it鈥檚 the result of many sacrifices,鈥 Kattoum said. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 start the Ph.D. program right away because of familial responsibilities. I always felt it was inevitable that I would come back and get this Ph.D. It鈥檚 a lifelong dream for me. It鈥檚 all about having a license to do what you love. I wanted to do research to help further student success in STEM disciplines, and now I have a platform to do that at Roosevelt University. I鈥檓 looking forward to how I can change the world, one institution and one student at a time.鈥