Public Policy Working Group: Monica Hernandez
School Discipline and the Post-Katrina New Orleans School Reforms
Murphy Postdoctoral Fellow
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About the Speaker
Mónica Hernández is Postdoctoral Fellow at the Education Research Alliance of New Orleans (ERA-New Orleans) and Tulane University’s Department of Economics. Her fields of interest include economics of education, development economics, labor economics and early childhood education. Her research examines the role that outside of school settings play on educational inequality gaps, in the context of both developing and developed countries. In her dissertation, Hernández studies the role of civil conflict in explaining the limited effect of additional public resources on school enrollment; the importance of non-cognitive skills for educational outcomes; and the relationship between childcare availability and older sisters time use. Prior to her PhD in Michigan, Hernández was a consultant at the World Bank and a research assistant at the Central Bank of Colombia. Mónica received her PhD in Economics and Public Policy from the University of Michigan in 2016. She earned her B.S. in Economics and Mathematics from Universidad de los Andes, Colombia, and a Master in Economics from the same institution.