Jenniffer Sobeida | Education | Research Excellence Award

Dr. Jenniffer Sobeida | Education | Research Excellence Award

Jenniffer Sobeida | Universidad Estatal De Milagro | Ecuador

Dr. Jenniffer Sobeida Moreira Choez is an active researcher at the Universidad Estatal de Milagro, Ecuador, with a growing academic footprint reflected in 89 Scopus citations, 20 documents, and an h-index of 6. Her research primarily focuses on digital transformation, emotional development, machine learning applications in education, user satisfaction in financial systems, and the intersection of technology with human behavior. She has contributed to areas such as digital wallets adoption, emotional competencies in postgraduate students, and data-driven approaches that enhance learning and decision-making. Dr. Moreira Choez possesses strong research skills in quantitative analysis, machine learning integration, applied behavioral studies, and interdisciplinary methodological design. Her ability to blend technology with human development themes showcases her diverse analytical and conceptual strengths. She has been recognized for her contributions through academic visibility, influential publications, and collaborative research with international co-authors, demonstrating her commitment to impactful scholarly work. Her awards and honors reflect her influence in emerging research domains and her dedication to advancing knowledge in digital behavior and educational innovation. Overall, Dr. Jenniffer Sobeida stands out as a dynamic researcher whose contributions continue to support technological advancement, academic growth, and evidence-based practices that elevate user experience and human development across sectors.

Profiles: Scopus | ORCID | Google Scholar | Web of Science

Featured Publications

1. Mendoza, V., & Moreira, J. (2021). Procesos de Gestión Administrativa, un recorrido desde su origen. Revista Científica FIPCAEC, 6(3), 608–620.
Citations: 258

2. Mera-Plaza, C. L., Cedeño-Palacios, C. A., Mendoza-Fernandez, V. M., & Moreira, J. (2022). El marketing digital y las redes sociales para el posicionamiento de las PYMES y el emprendimiento empresarial. Revista Espacios, 43(03), 27–34.
Citations: 185

3. Choez, J. S. M., Cedeño, R. A. B., & Cedeño, V. C. C. B. (2021). Aprendizaje significativo: una alternativa para transformar la educación. Dominio de las Ciencias, 7(2), 915–924.
Citations: 160

4. Choez, J. S. M., Bazurto, D. C. P., & Zambrano, D. P. C. (2022). Los tipos de familia y su incidencia en el rendimiento académico de los estudiantes de educación básica. REFCalE: Revista Electrónica Formación y Calidad Educativa.
Citations: 67

5. Mendoza-Fernández, V. M. M., Choez, J. S. M., & Plaza, C. L. M. (2022). Influencia de la gestión administrativa en el desarrollo organizacional de las instituciones de educación superior. Revista Publicando, 9(34), 31–40.
Citations: 59

Georgia W. Hodges | Education | Best Researcher Award

Dr. Georgia W. Hodges | Education | Best Researcher Award

Assistant Professor | University of Georgia | United States

Dr. Georgia W. Hodges is a distinguished scholar in science education, with a research portfolio deeply rooted in improving STEM learning, teacher development, and educational equity across diverse classroom contexts. Her work spans science teacher retention, immersive learning technologies, serious educational gameplay, self-regulated learning, and rural science education reform. With an h-index of 9 and over 280 citations, she has significantly shaped contemporary conversations about how students and teachers engage meaningfully with science content.A major component of Dr. Hodges’ research investigates the power of immersive and technology-enhanced learning environments. Her influential studies explore how virtual worlds, augmented chemistry laboratories, and interactive curricular case studies can strengthen students’ conceptual understanding—particularly in complex topics such as redox reactions, molecular representation, and biology content mastery. She has also led longitudinal investigations showing how serious educational gameplay supports learning gains in both elementary and secondary science classrooms.Another core area of her work focuses on science teacher trajectories, with attention to retention challenges in rural regions and the effects of educational policy, deprofessionalization, and school climate on career stability. Her research offers critical insights into how rural schools can strengthen recruitment, support systems, and ecojustice-informed STEM opportunities.Dr. Hodges also contributes extensively to teacher professional development, examining how preservice teachers adopt self-regulated learning strategies, improve questioning skills, and integrate equitable teaching practices for multilingual learners. Through her innovative, interdisciplinary scholarship, Dr. Hodges continues to advance science education research that promotes access, equity, technological innovation, and sustainable teacher development.

Profiles: ORCID | Google Scholar

Featured Publications

Hodges, G. W., Wang, L., Lee, J., Cohen, A., & Jang, Y. (2018). An exploratory study of blending the virtual world and the laboratory experience in secondary chemistry classrooms. Computers & Education, 122, 179–193.

Hodges, G. W., Tippins, D., & Oliver, J. S. (2013). A study of highly qualified science teachers’ career trajectory in the deep, rural south: Examining a link between deprofessionalization and teacher dissatisfaction. School Science and Mathematics, 113(6), 263–274.

Hodges, G. W., Flanagan, K., Lee, J., Cohen, A., Krishnan, S., & Ward, C. (2020). A quasi-experimental study comparing learning gains associated with serious educational gameplay and hands-on science in elementary classrooms. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 57(9), 1460–1489.

Hodges, G. W., Oliver, J. S., Jang, Y., Cohen, A., Ducrest, D., & Robertson, T. (2021). Pedagogy, partnership, and collaboration: A longitudinal, empirical study of serious educational gameplay in secondary biology classrooms. Journal of Science Education and Technology, 30(3), 331–346.

Oliver, J. S., & Hodges, G. W. (2014). Rural science education: New ideas, redirections, and broadened definitions. In Handbook of Research on Science Education (Vol. II, pp. 266–283).

Dr. Georgia W. Hodges’ research advances science education by integrating immersive technologies, evidence-based pedagogy, and equitable teaching practices to improve STEM learning outcomes. Her work strengthens teacher development, supports rural and underserved communities, and drives innovative approaches that shape future-ready STEM education systems. By bridging technology, practice, and educational equity, her contributions influence global STEM innovation, empowering both learners and educators.