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- Kevin Bastian
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill E-mail Author KEVIN C. BASTIAN is a Research Associate and Director of the Teacher Quality Research Initiative at the Education Policy Initiative at Carolina, a research institute within UNC Chapel Hill’s Department of Public Policy. His research interests include education policy and evaluation, teacher and school leader preparation, labor markets, and effectiveness. Recent publications include “Teachers without borders: Consequences of teacher labor force mobility” in Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis and “The apprentice: Pathways to the principalship and student achievement” in Educational Administration Quarterly.
- C. Kevin Fortner
Georgia State University E-mail Author C. KEVIN FORTNER is an Assistant Professor of Research, Measurement, and Statistics in the Department of Educational Policy Studies at Georgia State University. His research interests include teacher effectiveness and persistence, how education policies influence student equity, and program evaluation. Recent publications include work on the relationship between test-score uses and academic performance in School Effectiveness and School Improvement and an examination of the relationship between teacher preparation policies and student outcomes in Education Finance and Policy.
- Alisa Chapman
University of North Carolina E-mail Author ALISA CHAPMAN serves as Vice President for Academic and University Programs for the University of North Carolina system. Her professional experiences have taken her from employment in the public schools of North Carolina to employment in a higher-education policy setting. Prior to arriving at the UNC General Administration, she worked for the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction, serving school districts by helping them plan for and respond to educational technology needs. In higher education, her professional experiences have occurred at the campus, system, and state levels. Her research interests include teacher and principal preparation, quality, and supply and demand.
- M. Jayne Fleener
North Carolina State University and Louisiana State University E-mail Author M. JAYNE FLEENER is the former dean of the Colleges of Education at North Carolina State University and Louisiana State University. Her teaching and research interests have been in the areas of teacher education, educational research and policy, curriculum theory, education innovation, teacher education assessment, and the internationalization of teacher education. Recent publications include “Dimensions of teacher education accountability: A Louisiana perspective on value-added” in Teacher Education Policy and “Creating spaces for service learning research—Implications for emergent action and civic ingenuity” in Problematizing Service-Learning: Critical Reflections for Development and Action.
- Ellen McIntyre
University of North Carolina, Charlotte E-mail Author ELLEN MCINTYRE is the Dean of the College of Education at UNC Charlotte. Her research interests include teacher preparation and literacy and STEM practices, particularly for students at risk of school failure. Her most recent publications include “The CAEP standards and research on educator preparation programs: Linking clinical partnerships with program impact” in Peabody Journal of Education and “Comprehension instruction in culturally responsive classrooms: A review of research and practice” in Comprehension Instruction: Research-based Best Practices.
- Linda Patriarca
East Carolina University E-mail Author LINDA A. PATRIARCA is a Professor in the Department of Special Education, Foundations and Research and the former Dean of the College of Education at East Carolina University. Her research interests revolve around teacher education, specifically teacher assessment and teacher development. She recently published “Validity of measures of teacher candidate progress and performance: Towards institutionalizing an evidence-based approach to teacher preparation” in the Journal of Teacher Education.
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