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Principal Researchers and Staff: Barbara
Neufeld is the President and founder of
Education Matters, Inc. Dr. Neufeld began her career in education as an
elementary school teacher in the South Bronx and also taught in New
Haven. She received her Ed. D from the Harvard Graduate School of
Education and was a part-time Lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School
of Education from 1985-1997 teaching courses about qualitative methods
for research in schools and school districts, and the links between
research, policy and practice in urban schools. Dr. Neufeld has served
as principal investigator for numerous evaluations over the last
nineteen years. These include evaluations of 1) the Effective Schools
Programs in a sample of Connecticut elementary schools; 2) Dr. James
Comer's School Development Program in New Haven and in Hartford, CT; 3)
professional development programs associated with the Coalition of
Essential Schools; 4) middle school reform in districts funded by the
Edna McConnell Clark Foundation (for example, San Diego, Corpus
Christi, Louisville, and Minneapolis); and, 5) the Boston Annenberg
Challenge, now called Whole-School Improvement in Boston. In addition,
Dr. Neufeld has participated in basic research designed to inform
teacher education. Such research includes studies conducted by the
National Center for Research on Teacher Education and the National
Center for Research on Teacher Learning (both housed at Michigan State
University). Sarah
Birkeland is
a Senior Research Associate at Education Matters. Sarah began her
career as a classroom teacher, teaching junior high English in Jakarta,
Indonesia and elementary and middle school in Denver, Colorado. She
holds a bachelor's degree in English from Stanford University, a
master's degree in Educational Psychology from the University of
Colorado at Denver, and a doctorate in Educational Administration,
Planning, and Social Policy from Harvard University. While at Harvard
she worked with Susan Moore Johnson and the Project on the Next
Generation of Teachers, co-authoring the book Finders and Keepers: Helping New
Teachers Survive and Thrive in our Schools
(Jossey-Bass, 2004) and several articles about teacher induction and
alternative licensure. She also collaborated with Carol Weiss
on
a study of knowledge utilization in policy decisions about substance
abuse education, co-authoring several papers on the subject. At
Education Matters, Sarah is currently leading a study of the impact of
the Connecticut Center for School Change’s professional
development for district leaders, and contributing to studies of the
Boston School Leadership Institute and School Based Administrator
support program. Rahel Wasserfall
is
a Senior Research Associate at Education Matters Inc. Rahel is an
anthropologist with a PhD from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, who
has a wide experience in three different continents. Her work has
focused on gender and ethnic studies in Israel and in the Jewish world.
She taught gender studies and qualitative methodology courses at the
Hebrew University, Duke University, Chapel Hill (NC), Boulder
University (CO) and Etvos Lorand University in Budapest. With her move
to Boston, Dr. Wasserfall shifted her interest to Jewish Education. She
was the Special Coordinator at Jewish Community Day School in which
capacity she directed the AISNE accreditation process. She also
co-authored (with Susan Shevitz) a study on Jewish pluralism in a local
Day School, a study funded by the Mandel
Center at Brandeis University.
Dr. Wasserfall has wide experience in qualitative evaluation and is the
yearly evaluator of the International Summer School in Religion and
Public Life. She is also a Scholar in Residence at the WSRC at Brandeis
University (currently on leave). At Education Matters, Rahel
is
co-leading the Special Education Initiative, contributing to the
evaluation of the Combined Jewish Philanthropy’s Day School
Excellence project, and participating in other ongoing evaluations. Will Marinell is a Research Assistant at Education Matters, Inc. and
an advanced doctoral student at the Harvard Graduate School of
Education (HGSE). He holds a bachelor's degree in English from Amherst
College and a Master's degree in educational policy and administration from
HGSE. Will is a former English teacher who has taught elementary, middle, and
high school students in the U.S., Kenya, and Bangladesh. His current doctoral
research focuses on mid-career entrants to teaching, and he has recently
co-authored an article about teachers who perform specialized roles in their
schools Sola Takahashi
is a Research Assistant at Education Matters, Inc. Sola is a doctoral
student at the Harvard Graduate School of Education in the Education
Policy, Leadership, and Instructional Practice concentration. Her
area of interest is teachers’ work and teacher quality as they relate
to urban school reform. She received her bachelor’s degree from
Wesleyan University in sociology and studio art. Her master’s
degree and teaching credential are from the Developmental Teacher
Education program at UC Berkeley. Sola spent four years teaching
upper elementary school grades in the San Francisco Bay Area. She
currently works with Sarah Birkeland on the longitudinal study of the
impact of the Connecticut Center for School Change’s professional
development for district leaders. Erik
Haines is a Project Assistant at Education
Matters, Inc. In that role, he is responsible for data management,
computer support, and general office management. |
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