IES Should Change Structure and Policies to Meet New Priorities in Education, Including Equity, Says New Report
News Release
By Megan Lowry
Last update March, 31 2022
NCER and NCSER support a wide range of research activities related to education quality in the United States. Both programs are administered by IES, the statistics, research, and evaluation arm of the U.S. Department of Education. NCER and NCSER fund individual researchers and research teams through competitive grants, and by funding a number of training programs for education researchers. Since the programs’ founding, however, the landscape of education and education research has changed substantially, the report says.
“It’s clear that the needs of the education field have changed — and federal education research should reflect new priorities like advancing equity, understanding changing use of technology, and increasing the use and usefulness of education research,” said Adam Gamoran, president of the William T. Grant Foundation and chair of the committee that wrote the report. “Our report lays out a path for IES to embrace the new landscape of U.S. education, and produce research that can meet the challenges that lie ahead.”
Updating Research Grants at IES
The new report, The Future of Education Research at IES: Advancing an Equity-Oriented Science, says IES needs to revise the structure of its competitive grant process so that it is more responsive to the needs of educators, learners, and communities.
IES should prioritize new research topics for NCER grants, including civil rights policy and practice, teacher education and education workforce development, and education technology and learning analytics. New research topics for NCSER grants should include teaching practices and outcomes for students with disabilities, among others. The report recommends IES implement a systematic and transparent process to regularly assess adding or removing new study topics moving forward. IES should also expand the types of studies and study designs it funds, which will better ensure that IES-funded research is useful for education stakeholders.
The report also recommends IES review and fund grants more quickly, making two applications cycles available every year. IES should create a working group that represents education practitioners and policymakers, along with the education research community, to ensure their perspectives are included in IES’s processes.
Equity in Research Grants
IES does not regularly share information on its applicants, reviewers, and grantees, the report says, making it difficult to track whether awards are being distributed equitably to education researchers.
NCER and NCSER should conduct an investigation of their grant processes to identify possible inequities, says the report. This investigation should examine all aspects of the process, from application through review, scoring, and monitoring — and provide insights into the barriers specific demographic groups face in receiving funding. IES should also regularly collect and publish information on the racial, ethnic, gender, disciplinary, and institutional backgrounds of grant applicants and all principal investigators.
Equity in Research Training
Training for education researchers offered by NCER and NCSER serves an important and vital function for the field, says the report, but there is a lack of transparency into the indicators of training success, and who is participating in training. IES should collect and report data on the racial, ethnic, gender, disability status, disciplinary, and institutional background of all training applicants and participants — as well as develop measures of success.
The report recommends IES also implement a range of other strategies to achieve greater diversity in the racial, ethnic, and institutional background of all training participants, such as by supporting early career mentoring or funding short-term research opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students.
This is the second in a series of three reports about the Institute of Education Sciences.
The study — undertaken by the Committee on the Future of Education Research at the Institute of Education Sciences in the U.S. Department of Education — was sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education.
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine are private, nonprofit institutions that provide independent, objective analysis and advice to the nation to solve complex problems and inform public policy decisions related to science, technology, and medicine. They operate under an 1863 congressional charter to the National Academy of Sciences, signed by President Lincoln.
Contact:
Megan Lowry, Media Officer
Office of News and Public Information
202-334-2138; e-mail news@nas.edu
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