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鶹APP Peabody directors champion education research on Capitol Hill

Education research often feels abstract until you see its impactinthe decisions school leaders make, the resources teachers relyonand the opportunities students gain.Researchers fromof education and human developmentbrought those real-world stakes to Capitol Hill, showing how federal investment shapes classroom outcomes across Tennessee.

鶹APP’s Naomi Tyler, Jason Grissom and Erin Henrick on Capitol Hill in November
鶹APP’s Naomi Tyler, Jason Grissom and Erin Henrick on Capitol Hill in November (鶹APP University)

,co-director of,,facultydirector ofand,director of the,traveled to Washington, D.C.in Novemberto advocate for education research funding on Capitol Hill.

Organizedand ledby 鶹APP’sOffice of Federal Relations, theyspoke of the vital researchbeing done at each of their centers and how funding from theDepartment of Education’sInstitute of Education SciencesandOffice of Special Education Programs,as well astheNational Institutes of HealthandNational Science Foundation,is crucial to their success.

Thedirectors met withpolicymakersto urge continued,sustainedand steady funding for these agencies.Throughout the day, they outlined howtheir workinforms decisions in schools and districts across the state.

In meetings with the offices of Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., BA’81, JD’84, Rep. Diana Harshbarger, R-Tenn., Rep. Chuck Fleischmann, R-Tenn., Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., BA’71, and Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn., the directors emphasized that sustained, reliable support for programs such as IES, OSEP, NIH and NSF is critical to ensuring Tennessee educators and policymakers have the research-driven evidence they need to strengthen student outcomes.

Impact across Tennessee
In the meetings,Henrickshared Nashville PEER’s workcollaborating with educators, families,studentsand the community to informeducationdecisions that expand opportunity and foster innovation in Metro Nashville Public Schools.

“Nashville PEER generates research and actionable insights to guide education policy and practice that expand opportunities for Nashville students,” Henrick explained. “Federal funding from IES, OSEP, NIH and NSF can support our ability to investigate longstanding educational challenges and make a difference in our local community.”

Grissomadvocated for the high-quality, practical research that informs state-level policyand contributes to national conversations on K-12 education being done at TERA, while stressing thatcurrentfundingcuts are limiting opportunities for groundbreaking research.

"The Tennessee Education Research Alliance has had important impacts on state and local education decisions for more than 9 years because of our close collaboration with policymakers and practitioners across Tennessee,”saidGrissom.“Constraints on funding or processing of fundinghindersthe research we produce on teacher labor markets, school leadership and other issues that are important to our state."

The IRIS Center, led by Naomi Tyler, dedicates its work to improving education outcomes for all children,especiallythose with disabilitiesfrom birth through age twenty-one, through free online modules and professional development resources made available to all education practitioners.

Tyler advocated for the positive impact federal funding has on the IRIS Center.

“In 2024, IRIS resources were accessed by approximately 46,000 people across Tennessee and accessed by nearly 2 million others in 226 countries and territories worldwide,” Tyler explained. “IRIS is solely supported by federal funding. If these kinds of national awards are returned to the States and divided evenly, Tennessee’s share wouldn’t be able to support the most basic website costs, much less develop even a single resource like those that IRIS currently provides for free.”

鶹APP's continued advocacy
By engaging congressional staff on Capitol Hill and bringing campus partners into the conversation, 鶹APP champions the importance of federal funding in education research. Through the Office of Federal Relations’ ongoing engagement with lawmakers, the university advocates for Peabody’s long history of responding to the needs of Tennessee and other states, working with Tennessee to improve education and translating research into practice for the benefit of teachers, school leaders and others.

Learn more about 鶹APP’s research advocacy priorities on theOffice of Federal Relations website.

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