Edna Leticia Hernandez de Hahn is a scholar-practitioner known for bridging gifted education, sustainability, and systems thinking into cohesive learning models. A Ph.D. in Educational Psychology from the University of Connecticut laid the foundation for her global academic career, which spans faculty roles in the United States, Mexico, Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Her teaching and advisory work includes designing curriculum in educational psychology, bilingual education, and the psychology of excellence, with significant contributions to international program development. In Germany, she was a core faculty member in the Psychology of Excellence program at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. She helped design the first international master’s program in Gifted/Talented Education in collaboration with institutions in Graz and Basel.
As an associate professor at Niagara University and a contributor to the National Center for Research on Gifted Education, Dr. Hernandez de Hahn blends rigorous academic research with hands-on consultancy for schools and NGOs. Certified in Corporate Sustainability and Innovation, as well as Environmental Policy and International Development from Harvard, she merges carbon literacy with talent development frameworks, such as the Schoolwide Enrichment Model. Her research interests span cross-cultural giftedness, gender differences in mathematical reasoning, and regenerative education.
Today, Edna Leticia Hernandez de Hahn remains at the forefront of educational transformation. She recently spoke with us about her daily rhythm, her guiding principles, and her evolving role as an academic strategist.
Your schedule seems as dynamic as your research. What does a typical day look like for you, and how do you stay focused and productive amidst so many creative and strategic demands?
A “typical” day begins early with twenty minutes of mindfulness and a sunrise run – movement helps me think systemically. Mornings are reserved for deep work tasks, such as analyzing data from a talent development study or writing a manuscript on sustainability education. By midday, I pivot to consulting calls with schools in New York or Latin America, followed by virtual coaching sessions for teachers piloting enrichment clusters. Late afternoons are for reading the newest gifted-education journals or attending an online workshop on regenerative design. I protect focus by batching similar tasks and by asking about every commitment: does this nurture learners’ potential or our planet’s resilience? If it does neither, I decline.
As someone integrating systems thinking with gifted education, how do you stay ahead of emerging trends in psychology, education, and sustainability?
I view learning as a dynamic system: inputs from peer-reviewed research, global networks, and field experiments continually inform and refine my practice. I subscribe to Talent Development & Excellence, follow the OECD’s Future of Education briefings, and attend conferences such as the World Council for Gifted and Talented Children. My Harvard sustainability alumni group keeps me current on carbon-accounting tools, which I then adapt for K–12 project-based units. Finally, I co-design small action-research pilots with classrooms; real-time evidence is the fastest trend detector I know.
Can you share a defining challenge in your entrepreneurial or academic journey and how you navigated it?
The most significant inflection point came in Germany when we proposed the first international master’s in gifted education across universities in Munich, Graz, and Basel. Harmonizing three national accreditation systems felt like assembling a puzzle whose pieces kept changing shape. I convened a trans-disciplinary steering group, used causal-loop diagrams to map stakeholder concerns, and built phased micro-credentials that satisfied each country’s requirements. The program launched on schedule and today supplies specialists to seven European regions.
When you begin working with a new school or NGO, what is your initial approach to translating abstract visions into a concrete strategy?
I begin by listening, conducting appreciative inquiry interviews with students, educators, and community partners. Next, I facilitate a systems-mapping workshop to reveal leverage points (for example, how scheduling or assessment policy constrains enrichment). Only then do we co-craft a roadmap that pairs talent-development frameworks, such as the Schoolwide Enrichment Model, with measurable sustainability goals, so that intellectual growth and planetary stewardship advance together.
What is one of the most challenging decisions you have made recently, and what did you learn from it?
Last year, I turned down a multi-year contract with an international publisher because the proposed materials reduced giftedness to test scores, contradicting my belief in the dynamic development of talent. Walking away was financially uncomfortable, yet it protected the integrity of my work. The lesson: Mission alignment must precede scale.
Every leader starts somewhere. What was your most challenging early job, and how did it shape your philosophy?
My first full-time post was teaching mathematics in a rural, two-room schoolhouse in central Mexico. With scant resources, I learned to convert everyday objects—maíz kernels, river pebbles—into manipulatives. That experience cemented my conviction that potential is universal but opportunity is not; our duty as educators is to build opportunity-rich ecosystems.
You value continual learning. Describe a skill you have taught yourself outside your formal expertise and how you mastered it.
Carbon-footprint modeling. I began with online MITx and HarvardX courses, then shadowed environmental-impact analysts to translate corporate carbon-accounting methods into classroom projects. Now, I guide students in calculating their school’s footprint and designing reduction prototypes, merging quantitative reasoning with civic action.
Who have been the most influential figures in your evolution?
My father, an engineer, introduced me to systems diagrams before I could ride a bike. Dr. Joseph Renzulli’s work on enrichment sparked my interest in graduate studies. Colleagues at the National Center for Research on Gifted Education continually challenge me to ground creativity in data. And my students – exceptionally gifted underachievers—remind me daily why inclusive excellence is so important.
In your view, what truly sets you apart and fuels your success?
I operate at interdisciplinary intersections. Whether in Buffalo, Basel, or Oaxaca, I weave psychology, ecology, and leadership studies into coherent programs. That boundary-spanning comfort, paired with an insistence on empirical rigor, allows me to craft solutions that feel both innovative and evidence-based.
What advice would you give someone entering education today who wishes to build a meaningful, sustainable career?
First, cultivate systemic curiosity—ask how your classroom connects to global challenges. Second, ground your practice in research but test theories through small, iterative experiments. Finally, protect time for reflection; in a hyper-connected world, wisdom grows in the quiet spaces between emails.
Through her deep expertise in educational psychology and her interdisciplinary approach, Dr. Leticia Hahn in New York continues to develop practical frameworks that unite sustainability, creativity, and inclusion. Her work, both as a researcher and as a consultant, emphasizes scalable solutions that bridge the gap between global policy and individual learners.
We thank Edna Leticia Hernandez de Hahn for taking the time to share her journey and philosophy. Her continued focus on equity, talent development, and environmental literacy offers an essential model for educators and policy leaders worldwide.








