Bridgette Davis
Contact details
Contact
Location
Thompson Hall
200 Hicks Way
Amherst, MA 01003
United States
About
Bridgette Davis is an assistant professor in the School of Public Policy. She also serves as a faculty affiliate in the Center for Equitable Family & Community Well-Being at the University of Michigan. Her research interests include anti-poverty policy and implementation, nonprofit organizations, social inequality, and administrative burdens.
Her research focuses on how administrative burdens associated with need-based financial aid contribute to heterogeneous outcomes, social stratification, and cumulative disadvantage among first-generation and underrepresented racial minority college students. Davis conducts qualitative and mixed methods studies within nonprofit interventions to better understand the ways in which problems emerge and compound for multiply marginalized young people during the transition to adulthood. She has published in journals including Urban Education and Social Service Review. Her dissertation study, which was funded by the Hymen Milgrom Successful Pathways from School to Work Grant, has been noted in articles by the New Yorker, Politico, WBEZ Chicago, and the Chicago Sun-Times.
Davis holds both a PhD and an AM from the University of Chicago Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice, where she was an Institute of Education Sciences predoctoral fellow, a two-time Point Foundation Scholar, and was awarded the Simons Doctoral Student Teaching Award for outstanding contributions to the development of inclusive pedagogy and a classroom that promotes critical thinking, advances knowledge, and supports academic and professional development.
Prior to joining obtaining her PhD, Davis was a public-school educator in Atlanta and Dean of College Preparation and Persistence at a Title I high school on Chicago’s west side. She also worked as a nonprofit program director for both Teach for America and One Goal—coaching both teachers and aspiring first-generation college students to reach ambitious goals. Davis was also the first in her family to graduate from college and grew up in rural Iowa.