Faculty Info

Name: Alpana Bhattacharya
Title: Associate Professor
Department: Secondary Education & Youth Services
Degree(s): PhD, City University of New York
Contact Information:
Phone: 718-997-5168
Office: Powdermaker 150V
Email: alpana.bhattacharya@qc.cuny.edu

“I want to make something happen, even if it’s done on a small scale”
– Alpana Bhattacharya

Alpana Bhattacharya
As a child growing up in India, Alpana Bhattacharya visited national landmarks such as Taj Mahal, Red Fort, and Jantar Mantar with her family. But seeing these sites in January 2013, during the Year of India faculty-staff tour, allowed her to appreciate them in a new light. “It was good to go back as an adult,” she says. “I had a different understanding of the architecture and the history. I went as a tourist—a naturalized American.”
Insight into how individuals perceive and process information lies at the core of Bhattacharya’s career. A member of Secondary Education and Youth Services’ educational psychology faculty, she specializes in literacy issues. She works with teenagers and adults with and without learning disabilities, especially dyslexia.
Bhattacharya had another professional track in mind when she came to New York after four years of teaching high school economics in her native Ahmedabad, in the state of Gujarat on the northwest coast of India. She planned to get a master’s in administration and supervision from Baruch and return home to open her own school.
One class prompted her to change direction. “At Baruch, I was required to take a three-credit course in students with disabilities,” Bhattacharya recalls. Already interested in this area—in India, she had served as a reader at a school for the blind—she finished the educational administration program at Baruch in 1990 and earned a master’s in special education from Hunter College two years later, with a focus on learning disabilities. After receiving a doctorate in educational psychology from the CUNY Graduate Center, she joined QC.
Bhattacharya remains eager to influence education in her homeland. She is exploring collaborative opportunities in her field with members of the teacher education faculty at Banasthali, Delhi, and Jawaharlal Nehru Universities.
“In India, learning disabilities are stigmatized and compared to mental or emotional disorders,” Bhattacharya observes. “I want to identify universities, clinics, and centers that work with learning disabled populations.” Then she hopes to involve QC students in that work, whether through international exchanges and experiential learning or virtual classrooms set up over Skype. “I want to make something happen, even if it’s done on a small scale,” she says.
Favorite books: Mysteries, especially titles by Mary Higgins Clark
Favorite music: Jazz. Bhattacharya regularly attends events at Jazz at Lincoln Center and enjoys listening to New Orleans icons like Dr. John and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band—in New Orleans, when possible.
Little-known fact: An animal lover, Bhattacharya is the proud owner of a cockapoo, supports the Humane Society and the ASPCA, and is concerned about wildlife preservation.
April 2014