Assistant Professor Robert Wiley has received the 2025 UNCG Thomas Undergraduate Research Mentor Award in the pre-tenure category. The psychologist, who examines the cognition of reading and writing, has mentored 35 undergraduate students in his Cognitive and Neural Science of Learning (CNSL) lab since he arrived at UNCG in 2019, through the PSY433 Research Experience course.

Wiley involves his undergraduate mentees in all aspects of the research process, including lab equipment use and data collection. With his training, 15 UNCG undergraduate students have achieved Operator Level 1 certifications on the MRI at UNCG’s Gateway facility.
Wiley has also supervised three independent studies and two Honors projects. One of his students is first author on a publication in Bilingualism: Language and Cognition and two have co-authored manuscripts currently under review. One of his mentees has won an Undergraduate Research and Creativity Award and two are UNCG-McNair Scholars.
“I am still in awe of Dr. Wiley’s pedagogical approach because it relies heavily on real-time monitoring of each student’s mastery to scaffold learning appropriately,” said Portia Washington ‘21, who was one of those who nominated Wiley for the award. “To be an engaging professor is one thing, but to make sure that every student in your 400-level class understands the career opportunities and real-world application of the material is admirable.”
Wiley also received the University Teaching and Learning Commons 2024 James Y. Joyner Award for Teaching Excellence and the 2023 College of Arts and Sciences Teaching Award.
Story by Nikkola Brown
Photos by Sean Norona