Bruce Fuller

Bruce Fuller
Bruce Fuller
Professor Emeritus, School of Education,
University of California, Berkeley

Bruce Fuller is professor emeritus in the School of Education at the University of California, Berkeley. His research examines how public policies influence schools and families, particularly in efforts to decentralize education reform. Fuller explores the institutional and political challenges of designing effective policies, with studies spanning Latino communities in East Boston to impoverished communities in South Africa. He formerly served as director of Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE) and was a researcher at the World Bank. Before joining UC Berkeley, he was an associate professor of education and public policy at Harvard University and a project manager with the U.S. Agency for International Development at the U.S. Department of State. Earlier in his career, he served as a research sociologist at the World Bank and as an education advisor to the California State Legislature. He is the author of Standardized Childhood and Organizing Locally and is working on a book on civic activism and school reform in Los Angeles. Fuller earned his PhD in the sociology of education from Stanford University.

updated 2025

 

 

Publications by Bruce Fuller
Mothers and Young Children Move Through Welfare Reform
This report discusses the lack of knowledge about the impact of welfare-to-work programs on young children since 1996, and how policy leaders are debating ways to aid jobless mothers and enrich their children's lives. The project team followed 948…
Mothers and Young Children Move Through Welfare Reform: Executive Summary
This report examines how welfare-to-work programs have affected the lives of young children since 1996, and how they've impacted the home and childcare settings in which they are raised. The study followed 948 mothers and preschool-age children in…
This article discusses the role of childcare in promoting the development and opportunities for low-income children, noting that federal and state funding for childcare has increased dramatically since welfare reform. Despite this, children from…
Policy Success, Remaining Gaps
This paper analyzes the quality of center-based programs in diverse lower-income communities in California. The majority of centers displayed high levels of quality, and community conditions such as poverty levels and ethnic composition did not…