John Q. Easton is Senior Advisor in the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University. Prior to his work at Northwestern, he served as Senior Fellow at the University of Chicago Consortium on School Research. Earlier in his career he was Deputy Director and Executive Director at the UChicago Consortium. In addition to working at university-based research centers, Easton also has held governmental and foundation positions. He was Director of the Institute for Education Sciences in the U.S. Department of Education and Vice President for Programs at the Spencer Foundation. He is actively involved in several Advisory Boards at non-profit organizations, including the Illinois Economic Security Advisory Board and the Research Visiting Panel at the Educational Testing Service. He is Chair of the Illinois Workforce and Education Research Collaborative Advisory Board and Chair of the Early Childhood Research Alliance for Chicago Launch Committee. He just completed a two-year term on the Chicago Public Schools Accountability Redesign Committee.
Featured Publications
- September 2017Report
- June 2005Report
- July 2007Report
- October 2008Report
The Pathway to 20
- January 2010Book
Lessons from Chicago
All Publications
Title | Type | Date Sort descending |
---|---|---|
Charting Reform The Teachers' Turn |
Report | Jan 1991 |
Charting Reform The Principals' Perspective |
Report | Dec 1992 |
A View from the Elementary Schools The State of Reform in Chicago |
Report | Jul 1993 |
School Reform, Retention Policy, and Student Achievement Gains | Report | Apr 1995 |
Charting Reform Chicago Teachers Take Stock |
Report | Aug 1995 |
Improving Chicago's Schools Millard Fillmore School |
Report | Aug 1997 |
Improving Chicago's Schools John Tyler High School |
Report | Aug 1997 |
Academic Productivity of Chicago Public Elementary Schools | Report | Mar 1998 |
Charting Chicago School Reform Democratic Localism as a Lever for Change |
Book | Aug 1998 |
Adjusting Citywide ITBS Scores for Student Retention in Grades Three, Six, and Eight | Brief | Dec 1998 |