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Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D.

Vice President for P-12 Policy, Research, & Practice

Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D. serves as Ed Trust’s vice president of P-12 policy, practice, and research. In this role, Allison leads the P-12 team to highlight inequities, identify research-based solutions, and work with a wide range of equity advocates to push for change that will expand excellence and equity in the P-12 education system for students of color and students from low-income backgrounds.

Allison has been with The Education Trust since 2016. She previously served as Ed Trust’s assistant director of P-12 Policy, where she led the development of the organization’s policy agenda on issues essential to promoting equity in the P-12 system and coordinated data and policy analyses to execute the organization’s growing state-level advocacy efforts. She started her career at Ed Trust as a senior analyst, a role in which she developed and conducted data and policy analyses to highlight gaps in opportunity and achievement in our education system.

Before joining Ed Trust, Allison was a research assistant at the Center for Scaling Up Effective Schools, where she focused on identifying programs, practices, and policies that make high schools in large urban districts effective for low-income students and students of color. She also worked as a literacy coach for kindergarten and first grade teachers in rural public schools in North Carolina and taught fifth and sixth grade at Elsie Whitlow Stokes Community Freedom Public Charter School in Washington, D.C. She earned her teaching certification through the Inspired Teaching Certification Program.

Allison holds a Ph.D. in Education Policy from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, a master’s degree in teaching from Trinity University, and a bachelor’s degree in public policy from UNC.

What’s your favorite thing to do outside of work?
Spend time with my two beautiful kids.

What drew you to education?
I loved school. I was fortunate to have many teachers in my public schools who encouraged me to read and write, to ask questions about how things work, and to want to make the world a better place. I wanted to become a teacher who inspired children in that same way.

Why are you passionate about working at Ed Trust?
My goal is to strengthen American public education so that it is truly an equitable system for all students. At Ed Trust, I get to work with smart and passionate colleagues who share the same vision and work hard every day to make it a reality.

Author Archives

The Literacy Crisis in the U.S. is Deeply Concerning—and Totally Preventable

January 17, 2024 by Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D.

Literacy is one of the major civil rights issues of our time. Our children’s future—and our nation’s democracy—depends on us addressing this crisis now.

How The American Rescue Plan Can Help States Advance Educational Equity

June 02, 2021 by Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D.

The federal government has made an unprecedented investment in education. The American Rescue Plan (ARP) Act provides almost $130 billion for education, and the amount of funding each state and…

Why Schools Should Consider Online Coaching for Teachers

June 08, 2020 by Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D.

“Rrrr – aaaa – t.” A five-year-old boy on my computer screen looked up at his teacher quizzically. He was unsure of what the word was, so his teacher patiently…

Why School Shootings are an Education Issue

February 16, 2018 by Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D.

There have been less than 40 days in this school year, but already there’s been a slew of school shootings. Each one is horrific in its own way, but the…

Tackling Gaps in Access to Strong Teachers

October 03, 2017 by Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D., Rachel Metz

Of the many inequities in our education system, gaps in access to strong teaching have proven to be among…

NBER Study Makes Assertions About Supergroups Without Proof

June 21, 2017 by Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D.

A recent paper touting gains in Kentucky’s Focus schools (schools with the lowest performance for student groups) is, on the surface, encouraging. We want to know more about what’s driving…

Trends in State ESSA Plans: Defining Away Low Performance for Groups of Students

May 18, 2017 by Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D.

When is performance for a group of students so low that it requires attention and action? This is one of the critical questions that states have to answer as they…

From Teacher Appreciation Day to Teacher Appreciation Every Day

May 11, 2017 by Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D.

When I was a teacher at a charter elementary school in Washington, D.C., there was usually a catered lunch for Teacher Appreciation Week, during which parent volunteers would give us…

Evidence-Based Strategies for Improvement: What Are They, and Where Can I Find Them?

April 17, 2017 by Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D.

Although the Every Student Succeeds Act leaves a lot of decisions about how to improve struggling schools to schools and districts, the law is quite clear that the strategies leaders…

For Equity-Oriented State Leaders: 9 Ideas for Stimulating School Improvement Under ESSA

March 21, 2017 by Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D., Craig D. Jerald, Kati Haycock

s state education leaders redesign their school accountability systems under the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), there’s been a…

In the Classroom, Experience Is Two-Fold

February 22, 2017 by Allison Rose Socol, Ph.D.

We already know that low-income children, children of color, and English learners are more likely to be assigned to a brand-new teacher than their wealthier and White peers. But a…