Ruth Curran Neild Joins Mathematica as Senior Fellow

Ruth Curran Neild Joins Mathematica as Senior Fellow

Neild’s Expertise Lies at the Intersection of Education Research and Practice
May 06, 2019

Ruth NeildMathematica is pleased to announce that Ruth Curran Neild has joined the organization as a senior fellow.

Neild is a nationally known education leader with a wide range of expertise in both research and practice. Across a diverse set of research and leadership roles in universities, nonprofits, and government, she has emphasized rigorous, useful, and clearly communicated research designed to answer the important questions that arise from practice.

Neild comes to Mathematica after serving as the director of the Philadelphia Education Research Consortium, a research–practice partnership with the K–12 public education sector in the city. Previously, she held leadership roles at the U.S. Department of Education’s Institute of Education Sciences, including as delegated director from 2015 to 2017. During her time at the institute, she led the Regional Educational Laboratory program’s pivot to research–practice partnership work and supported improvements to the What Works Clearinghouse and ERIC, including the implementation of new data architectures that increased their flexibility and ease of use. Across all of the institute’s knowledge utilization programs, Neild championed plain writing and a wider array of research products and dissemination strategies.

Neild’s field leadership includes coauthoring the Common Guidelines for Education Research and Development, a roadmap for coordinating federal education research investments, published by the Institute of Education Sciences and the National Science Foundation. Currently, she serves as president of the Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness.

Neild received her B.A. from Bryn Mawr College and her Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Pennsylvania, where she served on the faculty of the Graduate School of Education. She has published extensively on the importance of recruiting and retaining high quality teachers, early warning systems for high school dropout, career and technical education, and small schools.

“We are thrilled to have Ruth join the Mathematica family,” said President and CEO Paul Decker. “Her expertise bridges research, policy, and practice to serve the needs of those at the forefront of K–12 education. With Ruth’s continued leadership in the field of education research, Mathematica and our partners will continue to make important progress together.”