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2026-27 Fellows

Haoyuan Chen
Marty Haoyuan Chen, University of Maryland, College Park

Marty Haoyuan Chen is studying topics at the intersection of economics of education, information economics, and experimental economics, examining how the private tutoring market, standardized testing policies, and college admission mechanisms affect student outcomes and access to higher education.

Deborah Gaisie
Deborah A. Gaisie, Georgia State University

Deborah Gaisie’s research interests are in the economics of education and labor economics. Her work examines how educational policies shape inequities in human capital outcomes and the labor market effects of changes in the structure of higher education markets.

Idaliya Grigoryeva240x256.jpg
Idaliya Grigoryeva, University of California, San Diego

Ida Grigoryeva is an Economics PhD Candidate at UC San Diego interested in development, migration, education, and wellbeing. Her research focuses on institutional and psychological barriers to accessing educational opportunities and upward mobility in developing countries, including psychological constraints.

Seung Hyeong Lee
Seung Hyeong Lee, Northwestern University

Seung Hyeong Lee studies topics at the intersection of labor economics, macroeconomics, and finance. His research examines human capital development, including the effects of selective mathematics and science education, as well as its broader implications for the labor force and corporate investment in human capital.

Justine Weng
Justine Weng, University of California, Berkeley

2025-26 Fellows

Paolo Adajar
Phi Adajar, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Phi Adajar studies the economics of education, with a particular focus on educational equity. Their work seeks to understand the barriers to accessing high-quality resources and how interventions and institutions can shape student success.

Rachel Moore
Rachel Moore, Princeton University

Rachel Moore is an economics PhD student at Princeton University interested in labor and education. Her research focuses on educational access, non-traditional students, and the labor market impacts of broad human capital development.

Andrew Smith
Andrew Smith, University of Wisconsin–Madison

Andrew Smith explores how high school curriculum policies shape student enrollment in mathematics coursework and influence their postsecondary choices.
 

Xizhao Wang
Xizhao Wang, Northewestern University

Xizhao's research interests include innovation and entrepreneurship, technology, labor, and organizational economics. She is studying how democratic incentives shape talent mobility and the impacts of democratic environments on attracting and retaining exceptional talent.

2023-24 Fellows

Ian Calaway
Ian Calaway, Stanford University

Calaway is investigating the allocation of high-achieving math students across different fields and occupations, as well as examining the impact of math competitions and teachers on the development of students' mathematical abilities.

Geoffrey Kocks
Geoffrey Kocks, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Kocks is studying the long-run consequences of educational programs, and the effectiveness of policies intended to reduce gaps in access to such programs.

Salome Aguilar Llanes
Salome Aguilar Llanes, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Llanes' interests are in the fields of economics of education, labor economics and development economics. Her research centers on examining the effects of various interventions on classroom dynamics and mathematics learning in the context of Mexico.

Kartikeya Vira
Kartik Vira, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Vira is studying the behavioral determinants of student choices in secondary and tertiary education and their consequences for students' career outcomes, particularly in the UK.

Iris Vrioni
Iris Vrioni, University of Michigan

Vrioni is studying topics at the intersection of labor and industrial organization, with a focus on the economics of higher education and human capital development.