Videos
Videos from Our Faculty
Our faculty focuses on how governments, markets and societal conditions shape schooling and educational opportunities.
Professor Aaron Pallas
Aaron Pallas studies how schools sort and select students, and the consequences of schooling for adult lives. His research looks at how federal, state and local policies shape how schools work. His current research looks at teacher accountability systems, and how teachers experience and make sense of efforts to hold them accountable for how they teach and what students learn.
Professor Sarah Cohodes
Prof. Sarah Cohodes discusses her research helping 8th graders navigate the school choice process in New York City. More information about this research project is available here.
Professor Jeff Henig
As a political scientist, Jeff Henig is interested in the ways that governance institutions, interest group competition, electoral politics, and ideological perspectives shape, constrain, and enable schools and school systems. In this video, he reflects on how his own notions have evolved since moving to Teachers College in 2002.
Professor Alex Eble
Alex Eble studies how early exposure to various messages, such as those coming from gender bias, can reduce human capital investment and harm individuals’ later life outcomes. He also works to identify, evaluate, and study the scalability of potentially high-leverage policy options to raise learning levels in the developing world.
Professor Michael Rebell
My work focuses on research, advocacy and teaching about how to reform educational institutions to promote equity -- and on bringing active litigations to bring about these changes. Students find it stimulating to see the ideas we discuss in class included in actual cases that are seeking to effectuate real educational reform.
Professor Judy Scott Clayton
My research uses quantitative methods to address urgent questions in higher education policy. My interests include financial aid policy, college remediation, racial disparities in student loans, and the returns to college persistence and completion. What keeps me motivated is knowing that the work that I do can actually change policy - so I focus on answering important questions with the best data and methods available, and communicating findings as clearly as possible.