Fred Doolittle
Fred Doolittle
Senior Adviser and Chair
Institutional Review Board

Doolittle joined MDRC in 1986, initially specializing in studies of employment and training programs for economically disadvantaged, out-of-school young people and adults. As MDRC expanded its work to include education, he focused on evaluations of elementary and secondary school reforms. At various points in his career at MDRC, he was Director of the Policy Research and Evaluation Department and the K-12 Education Policy Area and Interim Director of the Postsecondary Education Policy Area. He has served on the faculties of Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University, and the Yale School of Management. Doolittle holds a law degree and a Ph.D. in economics from the University of California at Berkeley. At the end of 2020, he transitioned to consultant status and now services as Chair of MDRC’s Institutional Review Board and as a senior advisor to MDRC.

Products

Report

Impacts on Elementary School Students’ Outcomes

Report

Findings After the First Year of Implementation

Report

The Effect of Project GRAD on Elementary School
Student Outcomes in Four Urban Districts

Report

The Effect of Project GRAD on High School Student Outcomes in Three Urban School Districts

Report

Thirty-Month Findings from the Evaluation of the Center for Employment Training Replication Sites

Report

The Milwaukee County Experience

Report

Case Studies of How Urban School Systems Improve Student Achievement

Report

The Implementation of 24-Month Time-Limit Extensions in W-2

Report

Initial Assessments in the Milwaukee County W-2 Program

Report

The Pre-Curricular Phase of Project GRAD Newark

Report

Implementation and Interim Impacts of Parents' Fair Share

Report

Lessons for the Child Support Enforcement System from Parents' Fair Share

Report

Implementation of a Program to Reduce Poverty and Reform Welfare

Report

Final Report on a Program for School Dropouts