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. 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
- April 17, 2026
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ITP Seminar: Jennifer Murray
April 17, 2026 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
Education Sciences, 259Fraction Tutoring Project: Lessons Learned
Abstract: TBD
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- April 24, 2026
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ITP Seminar: Taylor Odle
April 24, 2026 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
Education Sciences, 259Title: When and Why Does College Advising “Work”: Evidence from Advise in TN
Abstract: College advising programs increase the likelihood students apply to and enroll in higher education. However, few are proven effective at scale. We leverage the rollout of Advise TN across 33 communities to estimate causal impacts of a novel advising program on college enrollment, persistence, degree completion, and workforce participation. With complementary event-study and robust difference-in-differences strategies, we show this program raised college enrollment rates by 3 points (or 6%) at scale, especially among Hispanic, female, and rural students. We then interrogate mechanisms to explain this success with administrative records and unique student-advisor interaction data. We show increases to college-going are driven by larger improvements to early task completion, including filing the FAFSA and applying for state aid. We also descriptively show that program design matters, where college enrollment rates vary significantly by advising intensity, modality, and student-to-advisor ratios. We do not detect changes in students’ later college outcomes or employment and argue this is also due to variation in program design, including a focus on short-term information, medium-term task completion, and long-run skill development. Our study greatly expands knowledge on advising programs and is among the first to interrogate how programs come to “work” at scale.
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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 through award #R305B200026 (2020-2025) to the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
