Katherine received a B.A. in Classical Archaeology from Dartmouth College in 2006, and completed the post-baccalaureate program in Classical Languages at the University of California, Davis in 2009. She has done fieldwork in Greece at the Athenian agora excavations (2005-09), ancient Corinth (2013), the Sanctuary of Ismenian Apollo in Thebes (2012-14), and Olynthos (2014). She has also worked in Jordan with the Brown University Petra Archaeological Project (2010-11) and in the Caribbean with Brown's Survey and Landscape Archaeology on Montserrat project (2011). Katherine's research focuses on the archaeology of daily life in the Greek world during the Archaic through Hellenistic periods. Specifically, she is interested in domestic space and household archaeology, as well as craft production and the domestic economy. Her dissertation will investigate the intersections of these two topics in the sphere of household industry and domestic production. Katherine's other interests include archaeological science, digging circular features and floor surfaces, and dig dogs. In 2013-2015, she is co-leading a Mellon Graduate Student Workshop with Linda Gosner, entitled "Daily Deeds and Practiced Patterns: Approaches to Studying Daily Life and Habitual Practices in the Ancient World.”