

Rachel Elizabeth Fish
As a sociologist of education, Dr. Rachel Fish studies the racialized and gendered constructions of disability and giftedness, how these processes are shaped by school context, and how they relate to educational inequality.
She uses multiple methods, including experimental methods, observational data analyses, and interviews, to understand how students are sorted into special and gifted education programs, and how these services ameliorate and exacerbate inequalities. In another line of research, she focuses on social capital in schools, examining relations among teachers, families, and administrations, and how these relations are shaped by—and shape—inequality by race/ethnicity, class, gender, and disability. Dr. Fish received her Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, M.A.T. in Special Education from Western New Mexico University, and her A.B. in Sociology from Bryn Mawr College. Prior to joining NYU, she was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Notre Dame's Center for Research on Educational Opportunity. She also taught students with disabilities in northwestern New Mexico for five years. At NYU, Dr. Fish teaches classes to students preparing to become special education teachers, including methods for teaching for racial justice, methods for students with low-incidence disabilities, and using classroom data for reflective practice.
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Rachel Elizabeth Fish