A Powerful Mix of Expertise

The R4S team includes experts in the production and dissemination of research and the use of data and research evidence by schools and school leaders. Together they form a powerful mix of complementary expertise to support a comprehensive study of both researchers and practitioners.

Our Team

Dr. Henry May
Principal Investigator
University of Delaware
hmay@udel.edu

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Henry May, PhD, is Director of the Center for Research in Education and Social Policy (CRESP) and Associate Professor specializing in Evaluation, Measurement, and Statistics in the School of Education at the University of Delaware. May’s primary areas of expertise include methods for program evaluation, experimental and quasi-experimental design, causal inference, multilevel modeling, longitudinal analysis, item response theory (IRT), and missing data theory. He has extensive experience collecting and analyzing survey data and activity log data from large samples of students, teachers, and schools, and has published numerous articles in peer-reviewed journals including: Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, School Effectiveness and School Improvement, Education Finance and Policy, Education Administration Quarterly, the Elementary School Journal, Education Policy, the Journal of School Leadership, the American Journal of Evaluation, and the Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics. His current and recent research projects include leading the R4S research project funded by IES, the $4 million randomized evaluation of the i3 Scale-Up of Reading Recovery, a randomized evaluation of the Ohio Personalized Assessment Reporting System, a longitudinal study of the International Baccalaureate Students’ access, persistence, and performance in postsecondary education as well as a regression discontinuity study of the America’s Choice Ramp-Up to Mathematics program. May was a senior statistician and psychometrician on the IES-funded validation of the Vanderbilt Assessment of Leadership in Education (VAL-ED) involving over 300 schools nationwide. He was also the primary author on Using State Tests in Education Experiments: A Discussion of the Issues, from the Institute of Education Sciences, a National Center for Education Evaluation technical methods report on the use of state test scores in education experiments from the Institute of Education Sciences. Since 2003, May has taught advanced statistics and research methods courses to graduate students at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Delaware. As a leader for measurement studies, May works closely with Rebecca Maynard, Horatio Blackman, Sara Chapman, Kalyn McDonough, Kati Tilley and Jim O’Toole on tasks that include survey development, pilot design, data collection and analysis, and fielding the main survey.  He will also collaborate on technical reports and writing products for publication in the near future.

Elizabeth Farley-Ripple, School of Education.

Dr. Elizabeth N. Farley-Ripple
Co-Principal Investigator
University of Delaware
enfr@udel.edu

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Dr. Elizabeth Farley-Ripple, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of Education and Public Policy in the School of Education and an affiliate of the Institute for Public Administration at the University of Delaware. Her research expertise is in policy analysis and evidence-based decision-making, and she has worked on a range of educational and social policy issues, including research use in all levels of the system, administrator mobility, school and teachers’ use of data, teacher quality and effects, and issues of equity in a variety of student outcomes. Currently, she is co-leading R4S funded by IES and a Spencer-funded project examining teachers’ use of data for instructional decision-making. Dr. Farley-Ripple is an experienced mixed methodologist, with expertise using large administrative data sets, multi-level models, survey research, and social network analysis as well as engaging in large-scale qualitative data collection and analysis. She is also an active member of the policy and practice communities through research partnerships with districts and community organizations, coordinating and advising in education leadership programs, working with the Delaware Department of Education around assessment and data use, and participating in Delaware’s cohesive leadership system for statewide leadership preparation reform. As the Co-Principal Investigator, and leader of the qualitative portion of the measurement studies, Dr. Farley-Ripple works with her team on coding the qualitative data for survey development and manuscript writing. She has also led the center’s outreach and engagement activities, and collaborations with numerous organizations focused on research use.

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Dr. Allison Karpyn
Co-Investigator
University of Delaware
karpyn@udel.edu

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Allison Karpyn, Ph.D. is the Senior Associate Director of the Center for Research in Education and Social Policy (CRESP) and Assistant Professor of Education. For more than 15 years, Dr. Karpyn has developed and lead research and evaluation efforts in education and the social sciences, particularly in low-income communities. As Associate Director of CRESP and Assistant Professor of Education, Dr. Karpyn often works to guide and support the implementation and execution of high-quality research, both qualitative and quantitative. In this project Allison will contribute skills as a mentor and mixed-methods researcher, her experience guiding the development of protocols, and her experience conducting qualitative data analysis. As a Co-Investigator, Dr. Karpyn has assisted with the development of measurement instruments, and supports writing projects around study findings to help further the field of knowledge utilization.

Dr. Rebecca Maynard
Co-Investigator
University of Pennsylvania
rmaynard@upenn.edu

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Rebecca Maynard, Ph.D. recently returned to the University of Pennsylvania, where she is University Trustee Chair Professor of Education and Social Policy, following a two-year leave to serve as Commissioner of the National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE) at the Institute of Education Sciences. She is a leading expert in the design and conduct of randomized controlled trials in the areas of education and social policy, has conducted influential methodological research, recently published open-ware tools to support the efficient deign of rigorous impact evaluations, and is widely acknowledged as an accomplished translator of technical research into the language of policymakers and practitioners. She has been a leader in the development and application of methods for conducting systematic reviews of evidence on program effectiveness, including serving on the technical review team during the design and development of the What Works Clearinghouse, a leader in the workgroup that laid the groundwork for the Campbell Collaboration, and a prominent member of a federal interagency workgroup tasked with initiating the development of a common evidence platform to support more and better use of evidence to inform policy and practice. She is a Fellow of the American Educational Research Association (AERA); past president of the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management (APPAM); Recipient Peter H. Rossi Award for Contributions to the Theory and Practice of Program Evaluation (2009); co-recipient of the Society of Prevention Research (SPR) Public Service Award (2008); and recipient of the Best Book Award: Society for Research on Adolescents (SRA) (1998). Prior to joining the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania in 1993, she was Senior Vice President at Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. As a Co-Investigator, Dr. Maynard is actively involved in item writing, survey development, and overall direction of the study.

karen seashore louis  headshot

Dr. Karen Seashore Louis
Co-Investigator
University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
klouis@umn.edu

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Karen Seashore Louis, Ph.D. is Regents Professor and Robert Holmes Beck Chair of Ideas in Education at the University of Minnesota–Twin Cities. She has studied knowledge utilization, organizational change, and school leadership, improvement, and reform since the 1970s. Beginning with her dissertation, Dr. Louis analyzed data from the Pilot State Dissemination Project. She was the PI on the RDDU and Labs studies in the late 70s early 80s, and was involved in the Expansion of ERIC and the Pilot State Dissemination Project, the National Diffusion Network, the Research Development, Dissemination and Utilization Project, and investigations of the dissemination and use of knowledge generated by the Regional Educational Laboratories. More recently, she has conducted studies and published numerous articles on organizational learning and dissemination of research knowledge. Recent books include Organizing for School Change (2006), Professional Learning Communities: Divergence, Depth and Dilemmas (with Louise Stoll, 2007), and Building strong school cultures: A guide to leading change (with Sharon Kruse, 2009). She has served as the President of Division A (Educational Administration) of the American Educational Research Association, received the lifetime Contributions to Staff Development award from the National Staff Development Association in 2007, and is the 2009 recipient of the Campbell Lifetime Achievement Award from the University Council for Educational Administration. As a Co-Investigator, she has been involved with manuscript writing, supporting the team in development of the supplemental study proposal, and overall direction of the center.