Major Gift Funds Research on the Path from School to Work

Successful Pathways seeks project proposals from grad students

Published on Apr 10, 2015

by Jann Ingmire

Motivating eighth-graders from a disadvantaged neighborhood to build the skills needed for success is the focus of a new pilot program starting this month as part of the Successful Pathways from School to Work initiative. This study is just one of several research projects funded last year by the initiative. Requests for proposals for 2015 funding are being accepted through the end of April.

The Successful Pathways from School to Work initiative was created with a $17 million gift from the estate of Hymen T. Milgrom, AB, Accounting, ’35. The Hymen Milgrom Supporting Organization distributes the funding for the research projects. It is a 10-year effort to generate knowledge about how to build the skills necessary for disadvantaged students to succeed in the modern labor market.

“We are in the pilot stages of developing a two-year, in-school program for disadvantaged 7th through 9th grade students that builds the necessary motivation to succeed through a focus on non-cognitive skills,” said Anya Samek, a visiting assistant professor in the economics department at the University of Chicago. The principal investigator on the research project is John List, UChicago professor of economics. The two professors are working with Fred Chaney, the Leadership Training Coordinator for school district 170 in Chicago Heights, where the pilot program is taking place. The study is funded by a $750,000 grant from the Successful Pathways initiative, the largest faculty award given through the competitive process.

Successful Pathways is now accepting proposals for 2015 grants from graduate students only. Brief letters of interest are due April 30. The grants will fund two-year projects at an estimated level of support of $25,000 per year. More information about the 2015 RFPs can be found at the Successful Pathways website: http://successfulpathways.uchicago.edu/page/apply. A select few of the applicants will be invited to submit a full proposal later this summer and grant awards will be announced in the fall.

The Hymen Milgrom Supporting Organization is interested in a range of study types, but all with the focus of helping children, especially those from disadvantaged areas, be better prepared for successful pathways to careers, whether it’s college, on-the-job training, or other post-secondary vocational training options.

In addition to the research study headed by Prof. List, Successful Pathways also provided funding in 2014 to three projects headed by UChicago doctoral students.

Rebecca Hinze-Pifer from the Harris School of Public Policy received a $29,000 grant to evaluate the impact of early contact with the juvenile justice system for adolescents. She is studying the behavioral and academic outcomes of adolescents processed through the Cook Country peer jury diversion program.

Andres Hojman is analyzing the long-term effects of early childhood interventions with his $50,000 grant.  Hojman, an economics graduate student, is specifically looking at the fadeout phenomenon, which happens when the initial positive effects of the early interventions aimed at improving children’s intelligence diminish or disappear after they have left the program.

Math performance by low-income students being taught by teachers with math anxiety is the focus of research by Marjorie Schaeffer who also received a $50,000 grant. Schaeffer’s research will attempt to understand the effects of the teachers’ math attitudes to see if they lead to lower math learning and less positive math attitudes among low-income children. Schaeffer is a doctoral student in the department of psychology.

More information about the Successful Pathways from School to Work initiative and the 2015 funding competition can be found on their website: http://successfulpathways.uchicago.edu.

This article was originally published by UChicagoNews on April 3, 2015. Media inquiries about the Pathways initiative should be directed to Jann Ingmire at: jingmire@uchicago.edu