Penn State Launches Center for Research of Education Inequity

Inequities permeate the American educational experience. Students come from poor families; their teachers aren't as well trained or their schools aren't as well outfitted; they lack access to technology or regular meals. A new center at Penn State will become a repository for data and research on the topic of inequity and the go-to source for evaluating programs and policies intended to address the disparities in order to identify those that have the best impact.

The multidisciplinary Center for Educational Disparities Research (CEDR) is being jointly created by Penn State's Social Science Research Institute and the College of Education. It will be led by Paul Morgan, a professor of education who helped establish the Educational Risk Initiative four years ago. That program was created to provide a "community of researchers" that could work with faculty to develop proposals related to educational risk that could attract funding from sources such as the United States Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences.

The new center expands on that mission by helping researchers go after a broader array of external funding opportunities and to assist in proposal writing, pulling together multi-disciplinary teams of researchers, delivering mentoring and panel reviews, helping faculty gain course releases and hosting speakers and relevant events.

"Researchers will benefit from the expertise of a community of colleagues whose skills can assist them in advancing their planned investigations as well as submitting proposals to external funding organizations," said Morgan in a prepared statement. "Educational inequities can result in societal inequities. Our collective aim is to even the playing field and provide equal opportunities for children."

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • Two shadowy figures sit at computers with glowing screens, surrounded by floating digital codes in a dark, high-tech environment

    Reports Note Increasing Threat of Nation-State-Sponsored Cyber Attacks

    A bevy of new cybersecurity reports point to the continuing problem of nation-state-sponsored threat actors. The primary culprits have long been Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea, which all show up in recently published reports from Microsoft, IBM, Tenable, and Fortinet.

  • futuristic crystal ball with holographic data projections

    Call for Opinions: 2025 Predictions for Higher Ed IT

    How will the technology landscape in higher education change in the coming year? We're inviting our readership to weigh in with their predictions, wishes, or worries for 2025.

  • man working on laptop outdoors

    Digital Leadership Must-Haves for 2025: A CDO's Picks

    Now that he's more than a year and a half into his chief digital officer role at NJIT, we've asked Ed Wozencroft to reflect on his areas of concentration: What work must digital leaders "own" in 2025?

  • AI-inspired background pattern with geometric shapes and fine lines in muted blue and gray on a dark background

    IBM Releases Granite 3.0 Family of Advanced AI Models

    IBM has introduced its most advanced family of AI models to date, Granite 3.0, at its annual TechXchange event. The new models were developed to provide a combination of performance, flexibility, and autonomy that outperforms or matches similarly sized models from leading providers on a range of benchmarks.