Diana McCallum

Diana McCallum

Executive Director of Research and Evaluation, Human Services
Pronouns: she/her/hers
Expertise
  • Evaluation technical assistance to carry out experimental and non-experimental studies
  • Education research
  • Using evidence to drive decision-making
  • Teen pregnancy prevention
Focus Areas
  • Early Childhood
  • Systematic Evidence Reviews
  • Education
  • Effective Data Use
  • Strengthening and Disseminating Research
  • Labor: Strengthening and Disseminating Research
  • Family Support
  • Youth Development
  • Human Services
About Diana

Diana McCallum’s research spans the education and family support topics. She specializes in evaluation technical assistance and conducting systematic reviews to inform policy.

She currently provides evaluation technical assistance to Performance Partnership Pilot (P3) grantees who are conducting experimental, quasi-experimental, and implementation evaluations of programs to served disconnected youth. She has also provided technical assistance to Office of Adolescent Health grantees who are conducting evaluations to determine impacts of teen pregnancy prevention programs. McCallum has also contributed her expertise to several systematic review efforts, focusing on both identifying high-quality studies and synthesizing findings for various audiences. She worked on a review of programs for pregnant and parenting adolescents to identify impacts on educational attainment, repeat pregnancy, and contraceptive use. In addition, she oversees protocol development and reviews for a systematic review of school choice policies and the effects on students that are accepted into schools of choice, and those that do not participate. McCallum is also a certified reviewer for the What Works Clearinghouse.

Before joining Mathematica, McCallum worked for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Education as a research analyst, overseeing federal systematic reviews and national evaluations. In 2010, she was the recipient of the Society for Research on Adolescence’s Best Journal Article award for Parent Involvement in Middle School: A Meta-Analytic Assessment of the Strategies that Promote Success. She holds a Ph.D. in developmental psychology and a certificate in education policy from Duke University.

Key Projects (1)
  • A woman in a factory.
    Pathways to Work Evidence Clearinghouse

    The Pathways to Work Evidence Clearinghouse is a comprehensive, transparent, and systematic assessment of the effectivness of interventions designed to help low-income job seekers succeed in the labor market.