Kate Caldecott-Davis
PhD Candidate
Arts, Design & Architecture
School of Education
Email: kate.davis@unsw.edu.au
Supervisors: Rebecca Collie, Andrew Martin
Kate (MEd, MRes) is a PhD candidate in Educational Psychology at the University of New South Wales, Australia. She is also a registered psychologist and accredited teacher. Her doctoral research is supported through an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship and a New South Wales Department of Education, Waratah Scholarship, and focuses on motivational processes underlying optimal psychosocial development and functioning within educational contexts.
- Research area
- Research outputs
Educational Psychology
- Caldecott-Davis, K., Collie, R.J., & Martin, A.J. (2023). Need satisfaction and links with social-emotional motivation and outcomes among students. In B.Ng (ed.), Self-Determination Theory and Socioemotional Learning. Springer.
- Collie, R.J., Caldecott-Davis, K., & Martin, A.J. (2023). Academic buoyancy among female secondary school students: An examination of predictors and outcomes up to age 22. Social Psychology of Education.
- Caldecott-Davis, K., Collie, R.J., & Martin, A.J. (2022). Literacy achievement measure – Revised (LAM-R). Educational Psychology Research Group, School of Education, University of New South Wales.
- Caldecott-Davis, K. (2021). The problem of gifted underachievement. Australian Psychological Society: Psychologists in Schools Quarterly Newsletter 2, 4-5.
- Collie, R.J., Guay, F., Martin, A.J., Caldecott-Davis, K., & Granziera, H. (2020). Examining the unique roles of adaptability and buoyancy in teachers’ work-related outcomes. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice 26(3-4), 350-364.
- Caldecott-Davis, K. (2020). Academic engagement in high-ability Mathematics students: An examination of interpersonal relationships and personal best (PB) goals. Barker Institute: Learning in Practice Journal.