Last year, Alex Pinckney found herself struggling to pick a graduate school. The pandemic wasn’t helping matters. “I felt very overwhelmed, trying to make this decision without the ability to visit the schools I was considering,” Pinckney said.
Then she got an email from Dan Player, a professor at the University of Virginia’s Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy – one of the schools that had offered her admission. During a phone call soon after, he told her that at UVA, she could likely participate in a program that would allow her to perform vital education research, helping the Commonwealth of Virginia solve urgent policy problems.
Pinckney was sold. “I feel most excited when my work doesn’t exist just in a class and for a grade,” she said. “I wanted to do something with my time that felt useful. It meant a lot to know that I would have the opportunity to work with other students and professors on projects that really mattered.”
The program that Pinckney learned about that day is called Ed Policy Associates, a collaboration between the Batten School and 鶹ƽ School of Education and Human Development that admitted its first cohort last year. Open to students at every level and from a broad range of backgrounds, the program is funded by a combination of faculty grants and a grant from the Strategic Investment Fund to the Virginia Policy Partnership Collaborative, an initiative that connects Virginia policymakers with UVA faculty who conduct innovative education policy-related research.

