Our People

Our People

Co-Chairs

Dr. Seow Ing Chin Dorothy Tricia

Dr Tricia Seow is a geography educator with an interest in signature pedagogies that support sustainability and environmental education. To this end, she has actively conducted research on field and classroom-based inquiry learning, place-based learning, engaging students in discussions around environmental data, and teachers’ practices in environmental/sustainability education. As an experienced teacher (previously with MOE and now) with NIE, Dr Seow conducts pedagogical courses on inquiry-based, game-based and tech-enabled learning, among others.

Assoc Prof Diganta Das

Diganta Das is an Associate Professor at Humanities and Social Studies Education, NIE, Nanyang Technological University. He is an urban studies scholar whose research/teaching work focuses on the sustainable development of urban Asia, especially with respect to the evolving dynamics of urban waterscapes, smart urbanism, and smart city development. He is currently involved in two research projects; the first one examines waterscapes in a rapidly urbanizing Asia with extensive fieldwork in India, Singapore and Cambodia. The second involves empirical investigations on genealogies of smart cities in India and South Africa. He regularly deploys visual methods to capture vignettes of everyday urban life in Asia.

Co-Chairs

Dr Seow Ing Chin Dorothy Tricia

SENIOR LECTURER
tricia.seow@nie.edu.sg

Dr Tricia Seow is a geography educator with interest in sustainability and environmental education, in particular the signature pedagogies that support sustainability and environmental education. To this end, she has actively conducted research on-field and classroom-based inquiry learning, place-based learning, engaging students in talk around environmental data, and teachers’ conceptions and practice in environmental and sustainability education.

An experienced teacher with both MOE and NIE, Dr Seow also focuses on teaching innovations related to inquiry based learning, gamification, and tech-enabled learning.

A/P Diganta Das

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
diganta.das@nie.edu.sg

Dr Tricia Seow is a geography educator with interest in sustainability and environmental education, in particular the signature pedagogies that support sustainability and environmental education. To this end, she has actively conducted research on-field and classroom-based inquiry learning, place-based learning, engaging students in talk around environmental data, and teachers’ conceptions and practice in environmental and sustainability education.

An experienced teacher with both MOE and NIE, Dr Seow also focuses on teaching innovations related to inquiry based learning, gamification, and tech-enabled learning.

Professor Chang Chew Hung

Professor Chang Chew Hung is working in the fields of geography, environmental and sustainability education at NIE. His expertise is in curriculum and teaching within geography education, with a focus on correcting students’ climate change misconceptions and in technology-enabled instruction. He has published widely in the areas of geography, geographical education and environmental education. Additionally, he is active in international professional organisations interested in geography, geography education and environmental education. Further, he is the Co-Editor of the highly ranked geography education journal called International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education (IRGEE). More recently, he serves as a member on the advisory board of the University College London Centre for Climate Change and Sustainability Education.

Assoc Prof Tan Geok Chin Ivy

Dr Ivy Tan is Associate Professor at the Humanities and Social Studies Education Academic Group. Prior to joining the National Institute of Education, she was a secondary school geography teacher who also headed the Humanities Department. She has done research on environmental knowledge and pro-environmental action among students in Singapore. She currently serves as an advisory member of the International Geographical Union Commission on Geographical Education and as the Vice-President of the Southeast Asian Geography Association.

Assoc Prof Tan Aik Ling

Dr Tan is Associate Professor of Science Education at the Natural Sciences and Science Education academic group. She teaches courses on methods in biology education and integrated STEM curriculum. Her current research interests include inquiry-based science learning that is concerned about the sustainability of ecological habitats, the professional development of science teachers and STEM education in general.

Asst Prof J.J. Zhang

J.J. Zhang is a human geographer with research interests in border studies, material culture and critical tourism studies in the Asia Pacific. He has two main research thrusts: one that deals with tourism, heritage and geopolitics, and another that explores leisure travels and sustainable well-being among older adults. His writings have been published in international journals including Annals of Tourism Research, Asia Pacific Viewpoint, Cultural Geographies, Current Issues in Tourism, Geoforum, Tourism Management and Tourism Geographies. He is passionate about teaching and enjoys bringing students on field trips to inquire and learn about different landscapes.

Asst Prof Edward Park

Dr. Edward Park is Assistant Professor in Physical Geography at NIE and ASE (courtesy appointment), and a Principal Investigator (PI) at the Earth Observatory of Singapore (EOS), Nanyang Technological University, where he is developing a river research program entitled Tropical Rivers in the Anthropocene. His research attends to hydro-geomorphic processes and wetland hydro-sedimentary dynamics, which is strongly based on geospatial technologies, hydrological modeling, statistical methods and traditional fieldwork in geomorphology. He aims to develop geospatial databases on hydrological variables, sediment information and morphometric parameters in order to better analyse the interactions across natural hazards, human impacts and river ecosystems. The overall intention is to extend the discussion on the sustainable management of large rivers.

Asst Prof Wang Jingyu

Dr. Wang Jingyu is Assistant Professor at the Humanities & Social Studies Education Academic Group. Before joining NIE, he worked as a post-doctoral associate at the Department of Atmospheric Sciences & Global Change, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, where he observed and simulated mesoscale convective systems. He is also interested in how climate change might influence natural hazards such as tornadoes and hail.

Dr Soo Li Mei, Johannah

Dr. Johannah Soo has been in the teaching profession for more than 25 years and specialises in the fields of sustainable food consumption, food science education and nutrition. She is currently lecturing modules on Food and Consumer Sciences. Her current research interests pertain to how different segments of the population are invested in sustainable (or ethical) consumption practices (or not).

Dr Lim Yang Teck Kenneth

Dr. Kenneth Lim operates at the intersection of cultural anthropology, the learning sciences and cognitive psychology. He has had extensive experience in curriculum design, contextual teaching/training and designing research interventions around new media literacies. He is one of a dozen people worldwide to have been invited by UNESCO to be a member of its inaugural Symposium on the Future of Education for Sustainable Development (Asian case study, 2016-2017). In recognition of his expertise on mediating maker culture and learning, Kenneth was also a Plenary Speaker at a conference on Asia-Pacific Programme for Educational Innovation and Development (2016, organised by UNESCO).

Ms Ee-laine Oh

Ms Ee-laine Oh joined HSSE as a Teaching Fellow in 2022. She is a Senior Teacher (Geography) with 14 years of teaching experience. She strives to inculcate a culture of sustainability among students by helping them to understand the interconnections between human and physical environments. She believes that the youths of today can be influential advocates of sustainable resource management and development. Accordingly, she works closely with student teachers to develop curriculum resources related to sustainability education for the teaching fraternity.

Mdm Grace Liow

Mdm Grace Liow is a key personnel at Corporation Primary School.  She was previously a teaching fellow with the Social Studies Education Academic Group at the National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University, from December 2017 to Dec 2023.  Prior to that, Mdm Liow was a humanities educator at a secondary school.  Mdm Liow has 24 years of teaching experience in the education service.   Her passion lies in social studies and geography education especially in the area of sustainability.  Sustainability education is important to her, and she aims to instill a strong sense of environmental stewardship in her students.

Prof Paul Teng Piang Siong

DEAN AND MANAGING DIRECTOR, NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION INTERNATIONAL ADJUNCT SENIOR FELLOW, S. RAJARATAM SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES ADJUNCT SENIOR FELLOW, NATURAL SCIENCES & SCIENCE EDUCATION ACADEMIC GROUP, NIE paul.teng@nie.edu.sg

Professor Teng is Managing Director and Dean of NIE International Pte. Ltd (the education consultancy and outreach arm of NIE) as well as Adjunct Senior Fellow of the Centre for Non-Traditional Security Studies, both of which are entities of Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Additionally, he maintains a close affiliation with NIE as Adjunct Senior Fellow in the Natural Sciences & Science Education Academic Group. Further, he is Senior Adviser (agri-food) to A*STAR Singapore while advising several other regional organisations (e.g. The Southeast Asian Regional Center for Graduate Study and Research in Agriculture, The Asian Productivity Organisation) and local agri-food start-ups from Singapore pro bono. Professor Teng is internationally recognised for his expertise in tropical agrifood systems and (bio)technologies, sustainable rural transformation as well as food security, with a focus on smallholder cropping systems such as rice-based ecosystems.

Prof Hung Wei Loong, David

DEAN, EDUCATION RESEARCH PRESIDENT’S CHAIR IN LEARNING SCIENCES PROFESSOR, NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION – LEARNING SCIENCES AND ASSESSMENT CENTRE DIRECTOR (SCIENCE OF LEARNING IN EDUCATION), OER, NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF EDUCATION david.hung@nie.edu.sg

Professor David Hung is Dean of Education Research and Centre Director of Science of Learning in Education at the National Institute of Education (NIE), Nanyang Technological University (NTU). He is also the President’s Chair in Learning Sciences. His research interests lie in the fields of learning and instructional technologies, (social) constructivism, cognition as well as communities of practice. His foundational knowledge in the science of learning, the learning sciences and the science of educational systems has prepared him for his current forays into neuroscience, as well as physiological and other biological indicators of learning.

Assoc Prof Ivy Maria Lim

Head, Humanities and Social Studies Education

HEAD, HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL STUDIES EDUCATION ivy.lim@nie.edu.sg

Ivy Maria Lim is Associate Professor and Head of Humanities and Social Studies Education, National Institute of Education, where she now teaches courses on the history of Singapore and East Asia. Her research interests revolve around issues pertaining to social and cultural history. She previously served as an expert advisor and curriculum writer on a five-year curriculum development project on shared histories in Southeast Asia with UNESCO. Prior to that, Ivy was a collaborator on a Singapore heritage game with the School of Art, Design and Media (ADM) at Nanyang Technological University. Ivy is currently a member of the National Heritage Board’s National Collection Advisory Panel as well as the Educators for Founders Memorial Core Group and the National Library’s Acquisition Committee. She is also the president of the History Association of Singapore.

Dr. Tran Duc Dung

RESEARCH FELLOW ducdung.tran@nie.edu.sg

Dung Duc Tran is a research fellow at Humanities and Social Studies Education Academic Group, NIE, NTU. Before being at NIE, he was the vice director of the Centre of Water Management and Climate Change of Vietnam National University in Ho Chi Minh City. Sustainable development has been a core component of his research interests. Besides attending to hydrology/hydraulic issues within the Mekong Delta (e.g. integrated water management strategies) for the last two decades, he is also working in the field of socio-hydrology where he examines how farming livelihoods can be rendered (more) sustainable.

Selected Publications

Livelihood vulnerability and adaptability of coastal communities to extreme drought and salinity intrusion in the Vietnamese Mekong Delta.

Sustainability of rice-based livelihoods in the upper floodplains of Vietnamese Mekong Delta: Prospects and challenges.

Dramatic decrease of flood frequency in the Mekong Delta due to river-bed mining and dyke construction.

Long-term sustainability of the Vietnamese Mekong Delta in question: An economic assessment of water management alternatives

Questioning triple rice intensification on the Vietnamese Mekong Delta floodplains: An environmental and economic analysis of current land-use trends and alternatives.

Assessing impacts of dike construction on the flood dynamics in the Mekong Delta.

Ms. See Phay Fun

HIGHER TECHNICAL SPECIALIST HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL STUDIES ACADEMIC GROUP phayfun.see@nie.edu.sg

Phay Fun attends to the general administrative and technical aspects of Sustainability Learning Lab’s (SLL) daily operations. Besides taking care of its financial matters and lab facilities/equipment, she also supports multiple Principal Investigators with their respective research projects.

Dr. Tan Qian Hui

POST-DOCTORAL RESEARCH FELLOW, ASIA RESEARCH INSTITUTE, NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SINGAPORE tqh@nus.edu.sg

Qian Hui provides research and administrative support to the Sustainability Learning Lab (SLL). She is actively involved in the conceptualisation of its new website, including its signature pedagogies on sustainability/environmental education with Dr. Tricia Seow. Additionally, she has co-edited a special issue of HSSE online that spotlights issues and educational practices related to sustainability. Her research interests in the politics of sustainability as well as the intimate connections between waste and labour are often informed by critical theoretical perspectives. Further, Qian Hui is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow based at the Asia Research Institute (ARI), where she examines how plastic objects (especially single-use disposable plastics) are consumed, handled, discarded and reused/recycled within households in Singapore.


Ms. Pang Tien Feng

NIE22.PTF@e.ntu.edu.sg

Pang Tien Feng is a PGDE student (2021 intake) who is part of the team that designed the board game, Singapore Untamed (https://accommodatesg.com/index.php/singapore-untamed/). She is interested in the pedagogical potential of games, where she believes that well-designed ones can provide a fun and informative way of learning. She also hopes to showcase the rich biodiversity of Singapore’s ecological habitats, as well as how organisms have adapted to their evolving environments.

Ms. Ong Zhiqing

NIE20.OZ@e.ntu.edu.sg

Ms Ong Zhiqing is an undergraduate student at NIE. She is interested in how sustainability intersects with urban liveability and the green economy. Her current research project explores game-based learning as a pedagogical tool for environmental education. Specifically, she is examining how a physical card game “Getting to Zero”, can engage students in understanding how Singapore can achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050 (or not).

 

Mr. Colin Leong

NIE20.CLTY@e.ntu.edu.sg

Mr. Colin Leong is a Year 3 Geography student-teacher at NIE. He is passionate about climate change education, which is at the forefront of the geography secondary school and junior college syllabi. More specifically, he is interested in how transformative environmental action can take place on an individual or micro scale, in tandem with macro (i.e. inter-governmental, national) ones. Additionally, he is examining the pedagogical and technological affordances of smartphone applications (e.g. Adva, a carbon calculator), especially with respect to how they can play a productive role in promoting eco-citizenship.

 

Prof Ho Li-Ching

liching.ho@wisc.edu

Li-Ching Ho is Professor of Curriculum and Instruction and Faculty Director of Global Engagement of the School of Education, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her research, conducted primarily in East and Southeast Asia, attends to ideas organised around socio-political and environmental sustainability. Specifically, she has focused on social diversity in civic education, differentiated access to citizenship education and environmental citizenship. In her latest co-authored book titled Curriculum for Justice and Harmony, she argues that education must prepare young people to act on issues pertaining to social justice and harmony in order for communities to sustain themselves. She is a co-editor of The Palgrave Handbook of Global Citizenship and Education and has published research articles in Theory and Research in Social Education, Journal of Curriculum Studies, Teachers College Record, Teaching and Teacher Education, among others.

Asst Prof Perrine Hamel

perrine.hamel@ntu.edu.sg

Perrine is an Assistant Professor at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, and Principal Investigator at the Earth Observatory of Singapore. Her research examines how nature in cities, such as parks, trees, green roofs, among others, contributes to urban sustainability while rendering these places resilient and inclusive. She is well-versed in the fields of ecosystem services modeling, stormwater monitoring and management as well as climate resilience. She offers authentic, project-based learning experiences in the courses that she teaches on urban resilience, geospatial information systems, and field practice in Southeast Asia (including Singapore).

Related publications

Blue–green infrastructure for flood and water quality management in Southeast Asia: evidence and knowledge gaps.

Mapping the benefits of nature in cities with the InVEST software.

Ms Melissa Low

Research Fellow
melissa.low@nus.edu.sg

Melissa Low is a Research Fellow at the National University of Singapore’s (NUS) Centre for Nature-based Climate Solutions. She holds an LLM in Climate Change Law and Policy (with distinction) from the University of Strathclyde, MSc in Environmental Management. For her Master’s thesis on past and contemporary proposals on equity and differentiation in shaping the 2015 climate agreement, she was awarded the Shell Best Dissertation Award in 2013. She has previously worked at the Energy Studies Institute, NUS where she carried out research projects on a range of energy and climate issues of concern to Singapore and the region. She has participated in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Conference of Parties (COP) for over a decade and is an active sustainability thought leader, authoring, publishing and presenting at various forums. In 2021, Melissa was conferred the NEA EcoFriend Award and the Public Service Medal (Pingat Bakti Masyarakat) for her contributions towards environmental sustainability, climate change awareness and impact on youth. She serves as Chair of the Climate Action SG Alliance and is also an Advisory Committee Member for the MSE SG Eco Fund.

Ms Ding Ning

PHD STUDENT, THE ASIAN SCHOOL OF THE ENVIRONMENT, NTU
DING0141@e.ntu.edu.sg

Ding Ning is a PhD student with the Asian School of the Environment (ASE) at Nanyang Technological University (NTU). Her research project focuses on the important role that nature-based solutions (NBS) for sustainable stormwater management within urban Southeast Asia can play, especially in light of the effects engendered by climate change (e.g. greater extent of flooding). The project’s twin objectives are first, establishing a low-cost, open-source, real-time, autonomous and continuous mode of monitoring the quality of nature-based systems. The second objective involves modeling the performance of such nature-based solutions for stormwater management (e.g. flood mitigation, water purification) on a larger watershed scale.