Kevin Gee

kgee
Kevin Gee
Professor and Chancellor’s Fellow, School of Education,
University of California, Davis

Kevin Gee is a professor in the School of Education at the University of California, Davis, where he directs the School Policy, Research, and Action (SPARC) Center and is a faculty research affiliate with the Center for Poverty & Inequality Research. A 2020–25 Chancellor’s Fellow, his research focuses on students who are persistently underserved in education policy, particularly youth facing chronic absenteeism, bullying, food insecurity, abuse, and neglect. He examines how structural adversities impact children’s academic and socioemotional well-being and how school policies can address inequities. His work has been published in Early Childhood Research Quarterly, Pediatrics, Teachers College Record, Journal of Adolescent Health, and Journal of Adolescence and featured in The New York Times, Scientific American, and Education Week. He was awarded a National Academy of Education/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellowship and a UC Davis Hellman Fellowship. Gee earned his MPIA from the University of California, San Diego, and a PhD in quantitative policy analysis in education from Harvard University.

updated 2025

Publications by Kevin Gee
This report finds that improving school attendance is crucial, especially with the increase in chronic absence. Data on unexcused absences should be used to create a more preventive, problem-solving, and equitable response to poor attendance.…
Evidence and Implications
This brief summarizes the current evidence base on multi-tiered trauma-informed practices in schools to prevent, assess, and address trauma in students. Although the effectiveness of trauma-informed approaches is limited, the most compelling…
Research to Guide Distance and Blended Instruction
This suite of publications provides 10 recommendations based on the PACE report to help educators and district leaders provide high-quality instruction through distance and blended learning models in the 2020-21 school year. Despite the challenges…
Characteristics, Outcomes, and Transitions
The CORE districts studied characteristics, outcomes, and transitions of students with disabilities (SWDs). Specific learning disability was the most common type. Males, African Americans, English learners, and foster youth were overrepresented.…