Hannah D'Apice is a PhD students at the GSE. (Photo: Joleen Richards)
鈥淚 love the research process and the opportunity to think deeply about really important questions in education.鈥

Hannah D'Apice

MA 鈥17 International Comparative Education, PHD 鈥24
Disrupting systems of inequality in education

When Hannah D鈥橝pice first came to the GSE in 2016, she was looking to make sense of her experiences as a middle school teacher in Dallas, her hometown. 

鈥淚 saw a real disconnect between what my students needed in the classroom and the resources we were provided as teachers,鈥 said D鈥橝pice, who received her master鈥檚 from the GSE鈥檚 International Comparative Education (ICE) program in 2017. 鈥淚nequality became a preoccupation of my research after seeing my brilliant, thoughtful students getting fewer opportunities to shine because of their income level.鈥

After finishing her master鈥檚 program, D鈥橝pice continued her work as a researcher studying the efficacy of edtech interventions in schools before returning to the GSE to pursue her PhD.

鈥淚 love the research process and the opportunity to think deeply about important questions in education,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 really wanted this time period that I could dedicate to thinking and reading deeply, as well as researching and writing.鈥

D鈥橝pice鈥檚 current research focuses on how systems of inequality can become encoded or disrupted by formal structures and policies.

鈥淚鈥檝e always been interested in how we can change the institutions around us,鈥 said D鈥橝pice, who is co-president of the GSE Student Guild and helps lead a program supported by the GSE that works to promote antiracist practices at the GSE.

Through the program, D鈥橝pice and other GSE students have helped 海角乱伦社区 faculty with syllabus consultations, advice on how to incorporate diverse voices in their coursework, and thought partnership in reimagining course pedagogy. 

鈥淯nderstanding that things can change in higher education to improve individual experiences of inclusion 鈥 and that I can inform that change through my research 鈥 gives me hope and makes me grateful that I can do such interesting and positive work.鈥

Photo: Joleen Richards | Words: Olivia Peterkin


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