Arya Ansari, PhD, an associate professor of Human Development and Family Science in the College of Education and Human Ecology, has earned The Ohio State University 2025 Early Career Distinguished Scholar Award. Senior leadership in the Enterprise for Research, Innovation and Knowledge recently surprised Ansari with the honor.     

arya ansari headshot

“Coming here right before the pandemic was tough, but everyone has been incredibly supportive and provided me with plenty of opportunities to do impactful work,” said Ansari. 

“I am genuinely thankful and appreciative and couldn't have done this without everyone here.”

Arya Ansari

 

Ansari is also a faculty associate at the Crane Center for Early Childhood Research and Policy and a faculty affiliate with the Institute for Population Research. Ansari’s primary field of interest include child development, early childhood education, parenting, poverty and school readiness. 

“Dr. Ansari, your research in early childhood education programs truly embodies Ohio State’s land-grant mission to improve the well-being of our communities. Your nominators also stressed how rare it is to find an early career scholar who has had the same impacts as you have…in particular, your mentorship of future researchers by giving them first or co-author roles,” said Cynthia Carnes, senior associate vice president for research operations during the surprise.  

“I want to say that we are extremely proud of you, given that there are so few faculty that do this work. And more importantly, you make an effort to translate your work into practice,” said Don Pope-Davis, College of Education & Human Ecology dean. “Scholars like you must continue to pivot so that their work makes a difference and has an impact in society. You model that by engaging in our community.” 

five people posing for a picture

“I recently attended an event with Arya and his two young children. I was touched seeing him live his science as a loving father,” Erik Porfeli, chair of the Department of Human Science. “He’s a great scientist and a great person.”

Ansari earned the Association for Psychological Science Rising Star Award and the American Educational Research Association Early Career Award in 2023. He serves as an associate editor for Early Education and Development and on the editorial boards for Early Childhood Research Quarterly and Journal of Montessori Research. Prior to arriving at Ohio State, Ansari was involved in research at the University of Virginia. Ansari earned his bachelor's in psychology from George Mason University, and his master's and doctorate degrees in human development and family sciences from the University of Texas at Austin. 

The Early Career Distinguished Scholar Award is among the highest annual honors awarded at Ohio State. The university-level award honors three to four faculty members who demonstrate scholarly activity, conduct research or creative works that represent exceptional achievements in their fields and garner distinction for the university. Award recipients are nominated by their departments and chosen by a committee of senior faculty, including past award recipients. Early Career Distinguished Scholars receive an honorarium and a research grant to be used over the next three years. 


Quotes from Ansari’s nomination:   

“I also want to recognize the ways Dr. Ansari is building the future of the research field, through collaborations with colleagues and students. He has several papers co-authored with his students and post-docs, including students in first-author role. Given the professional pressures on faculty to take leadership credit for empirical works, whenever reasonable, the number of papers written with his students in lead author roles is extremely impressive…These are investments that will have lasting field-building consequences beyond his own achievements,” Eric Dearing, Boston College.   

“Dr. Ansari has achieved a high level of coherence in his scholarship – at the heart of Dr. Ansari’s program of research is his focus on systemic and structural factors that shape children’s developmental outcomes. This shift away from an individual-level perspective – which can often reinforce deficit views of children—to a more systemic and holistic approach pushes the field forward and is a considerable strength of Dr. Ansari’s ongoing work. In particular, one of Dr. Ansari’s important contributions is helping unpack the role of classroom level experiences in shaping young children’s absenteeism behaviors.” Kevin A. Gee, University of California, Davis.   

“He is a rising star among developmental scholars who are unpacking the mechanisms through which early childhood education and home environments shape young children’s development. Not to mention his program of research is of high impact when it comes to practical significance for informing early childhood education programs and policies. Even more important than…quantitative indices of excellence is that Dr. Ansari has distinguished himself with important scientific contributions to understanding how early childhood education shapes young children’s development. These have included seminal papers that bring a fresh perspective to age-old questions.,” Elizabeth Votruba-Drzal, University of Pittsburgh.