Email: pullin@bc.edu
Education law and public policy; testing and the law; opportunity to learn; educator quality; accountability in higher education; impact of social science research on legal and public policy decisions in education.
Dr. Pullin is not currently accepting Ph.D. students.
Diana Pullin is esteemed as both a lawyer and scholar, and the range of her expertise reflects her experience: she has published extensively on public policy and testing, educational leadership and teaching, and the impact of social science on legal decisions in education.
Pullin has taught at the Lynch School since 1994, where she served as Dean from 1987 to 1994. She has been admitted to practice law in three states as well as various federal trial and appellate courts and the U.S. Supreme Court. In the courtroom, she participated in litigation challenging the use of minimum competency tests to determine the award of high school diplomas and worked on the early implementation of state and federal laws barring discrimination on the basis of disability status and gender.
She is co-author of many books, chapters, and journal articles, including the 1999 Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing, published by the American Educational Research Association. She received her bachelor鈥檚 degree from Grinnell College, and her master鈥檚, doctoral, and law degrees from the University of Iowa.
Pullin is a Fellow of American Educational Research Association (elected), a lifetime associate member of National Academy of Sciences (elected), and an elected member of the National Academy of Education. From 2015 to 2016, she was Chair of a committee to review the application of a new college for the Massachusetts Department of Higher Education.
Research partnership with the Learning Sciences Institute of Australian Catholic University and a consortium of higher education institutions on the implementation and legal issues concerning a performance assessment for graduation and licensure in teacher education