Biographical Information
Cathlin Goulding, Ed.D. is a curriculum specialist and education researcher. She co-directs the YURI Education Project, an education design studio that develops resources for cultural institutions and PK-12 students. She has written educational materials for the WNET Group’s Mission U.S., American Masters, and It’s Lit! series; Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery; WETA’s The Asian Americans; Fred T. Korematsu Institute; Teachers College Inclusive Classrooms Project; Minor Collective; Mikva Challenge; David's Legacy Foundation; iPondr@Work; Little, Brown and Company Books; and Wing Luke Museum of the Asian Pacific American Experience.
She started in the education field as an English Language Arts teacher at a public high school in the East San Francisco Bay Area. She trained as an education researcher at Teachers College, Columbia University. After completing her doctorate, she served as an Andrew W. Mellon postdoctoral research fellow at the 9/11 Memorial & Museum and visiting scholar at New York University.
Her research and writings focus on place-based learning, public pedagogy, and the teaching of historical violence. As the daughter and granddaughter of Japanese Americans incarcerated during World War II, the concentration camp is a key area of inquiry.
In 2019, she co-founded YURI Education Project with Freda Lin. United in their goal to bring more Asian American stories to PK-12 students, they started their own education consulting project named after the civil rights activist, Yuri Kochiyama. They have developed youth-friendly curricula on documentary films, pop culture, rare archival sources, and museum exhibitions.
In addition to her work as a curriculum specialist, she teaches future public school teachers and instructional leaders at the City University of New York, San José State University, and Teachers College, Columbia University.