Interdisciplinary Training Program in Education Sciences
Training researchers whose evidence-based results will help inform education policy and practice.
Mission
The Interdisciplinary Training Program in Education Sciences (ITP) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is one of a network of pre-doctoral training programs funded by the U.S. Department of Education’s Institute of Education Sciences. The ITP is preparing a new generation of outstanding education science scholars by training them in methods of causal inference in the social sciences, engaging them in a weekly seminar and supporting their translational research through a variety of internship opportunities. The community of faculty and Ph.D.-level researchers that work with ITP Fellows come from academic departments in education, social work and across the social sciences. Fellows join an interdisciplinary research community including doctoral students in economics, political science, psychology, social welfare, sociology, educational leadership & policy analysis, educational policy studies and educational psychology.
Upcoming Events
- November 8, 2024
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ITP Seminar: Karl Vachuska
November 8, 2024 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
rm 259 Educational Sciences, 1025 W Johnson St, Madison, WI 53706, USAKarl Vachuska, Graduate Student, Sociology, UW-Madison
Title: The effect of college attendance on mid-life cognitive outcomes: A causal decomposition approach using the High School and Beyond data
Abstact: This study investigates the potential role of baccalaureatecollege attendance in mitigating inequities in cognitive function in midlifethat are rooted in social origins. Using data from the High School and Beyondstudy, we apply Yu and Elwert’s (2023) framework to causally decomposecognitive outcomes between those who had at least one parent who obtained abaccalaureate degree and those who did not) into components attributable tosample members’ college attendance and components not attributable to theircollege attendance. Fundamentally, our analysis estimates how disparities inmidlife cognitive function would shift if college attendance was assignedindependent of social origin. We find that college attendance explainsapproximately 20% of the difference in average mid-life cognition of childrenwhose parents did and did not attend college—and almost entirely throughdifferential college attendance rates between the two groups rather than thedifference in the effects of attendance or the process of selection.
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- November 15, 2024
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ITP Seminar: Bill Carbonaro
November 15, 2024 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
rm 259 Educational Sciences, 1025 W Johnson St, Madison, WI 53706, USABill Carbonaro, Professor, Sociology, University of Notre Dame
https://sociology.nd.edu/people/william-carbonaro/Title: Racialinequality in high-school math course enrollments: the long-term effects ofearly inequalities
Abstract TBA
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Coursework: ITP Seminar
This project is supported by the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) in the U.S. Department of Education.