Developed by Jacques Lesure, EDUC 1015: Reimagining Power: Community-Driven Evaluation and Education, will explore how to use culturally responsive approaches to evaluate the effectiveness of social programs in partnership with three organizations serving young people in Providence.
Education Faculty members Christopher Cleveland and Kenneth Wong weigh the potential impacts of both Republican and Democratic party platforms on U.S. education policy.
The Education Department is pleased to announce that Professors Kenneth Wong, David Rangel, and Matthew Kraft have been awarded funding to support innovative research projects aimed at improving educational opportunities for students.
John Papay, associate professor of education and economics and the director of the Annenberg Institute, weighs in on the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS) policy discussion.
Faculty members Christopher Cleveland and John Papay have received prestigious research grants as part of the Student Upward Mobility Initiative. They will join 16 other research teams nationwide exploring how PKâ12 education can enhance students' future economic mobility.
Our new "Insight to Impact" series invites faculty from the Education Department to share how their recent research can be applied in practical ways that improve education systems. Here, we look at Professor Cleveland's research papers, "Understanding Individualized Education Program (IEP) Goals at Scale" and "The Effects of Response to Intervention on Disability Identification and Achievement."
Bilena Dabalen â25 and Morgan Isabell â26 both spent this summer researching the history of for-profit companies affecting public education as UTRA Research Assistants for Professor Tracy Steffes, Chair of the Department of Education.
In her new book, Professor Jin Li explores the philosophical origins of the concept of self in both Eastern and Western cultures and synthesizes her findings with cutting-edge psychological research to reveal a fundamental contrast.
Teacher strikes are tactics that unions use to influence contract negotiations and high-profile actions that have the potential to signal the need for policy change. Professor Matthew Kraft (Brown University) and co-author Melissa Arnold Lyon (UAlbany) studied the political economy of strikes by collecting original data on U.S. teacher strikes from 2007-2018.
April 12, 2024 National Academy of Education (NAEd)
A three-year study focused on the evaluation and improvement of teacher preparation programs aims to identify best practices among existing models of evaluation tools and provide recommendations for developing new models. Under the direction of an interdisciplinary steering committee that included Professor John Papay, the project outcomes will be made applicable and accessible to different stakeholders, including state and federal agencies, teacher preparation programs, practitioners, and researchers.
In examining the state of the U.S. K-12 teaching profession over the last half century, Matthew A. Kraft (Brown University) and Melissa Arnold Lyon (University at Albany) find that the current state of the teaching profession is at or near its lowest levels in 50 years. Kraft and Lyon identify and explore a range of hypotheses that might explain these historical patterns including economic and sociopolitical factors, education policies, and school environments.
Brown University's Department of Education is pleased to welcome Katie Rieser, who has joined the faculty as Director of the Master of Arts in Teaching program and a Senior Lecturer in Education. Katie's research connects teacher education pedagogy with anti-racist best practices in K-12 schools.