Hi! I’m a second year Ph.D. student in Education Policy and Program Evaluation. My research is driven by a central question: How can education systems be adapted to protect and rebuild human capital when faced with large-scale shocks like conflict, displacement, and political crises? My academic and personal journey, which started in Nicaragua, has given me a strong motivation to address learning inequalities caused by political instability and forced migration.
I focus on designing and evaluating scalable interventions that can reduce these inequalities. A core part of my approach is to integrate robust psychosocial support within educational settings to ensure all children can learn effectively. The centerpiece of my current work is a large-scale randomized controlled trial (RCT) in Armenia that I co-lead across 450 public schools. This project is designed to meet the educational and psychosocial needs of children displaced by the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. I also recently co-led another RCT in Ukraine with over 10,000 students, where we embedded mental health components into an online tutoring program and saw positive impacts on learning outcomes and student well-being.
I am affiliated with the Center for International Development (CID), the Institute for Quantitative Social Science (IQSS), and the Education Policy Lab for Latin America. My ultimate goal is to produce rigorous research that can inform social policies and create effective pathways toward more just societies.