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The Strategic Vision and Goals Behind Uniting the Pullias Center for Higher Education and Center for Enrollment Research, Policy and Practice

A conversation with Professors Adrianna Kezar and Julie Posselt on merging two leading research centers to advance equity, and student access and success in higher education.

By Ellen Evaristo Published on

In a bold step to strengthen 海角论坛鈥檚 leadership in higher education access, equity and student success, the  and the  have officially merged. Professors Adrianna Kezar and Julie Posselt will co-direct the merged center, combining decades of research, policy and practice to lead transformative work from high school through doctoral education.

The newly-unified center will maintain the respected and well-known name of the Pullias Center for Higher Education, in large part due to the generous bequest by the Pullias family that sustains it. Kezar and Posselt reflect on the motivations for the merger, the center鈥檚 long-term vision and its impact on the future of higher education.

What inspired the merger of the Pullias Center and CERPP at this time?

Adrianna Kezar: We have two long-standing centers that are doing synergistic work around access, and it became clear they could benefit from working more closely together. Campuses are also increasingly trying to link their access initiatives with student success strategies as part of a more integrated approach to enrollment management. Pullias brings a long-time focus on student success that complements and enhances CERPP鈥檚 work.

Julie Posselt: Enrollment management is the infrastructure through which institutions realize their visions of access and success. With CERPP focused on enrollment and Pullias focused on higher education access and success, the two are natural partners. We also noticed both centers intentionally connect research, policy and practice鈥攊t has been in CERPP鈥檚 name and mission and is embedded in Pullias鈥檚 work as well. It became clear we would be stronger together.

What is the overarching vision for the new, unified center?

AK/JP: The joint Center will be a national leader in linking research, policy and practice to improve the systems that shape postsecondary access and success鈥攆rom high school through doctoral education.

How will leadership responsibilities be shared, and what strengths do you each bring to the merged center?

AK/JP: We will serve as co-directors, building on our complementary strengths. Adrianna brings deep expertise in student success and leadership, a historic focus of Pullias. Julie brings a strong emphasis on access, central to both CERPP and Pullias. We鈥檙e both systems thinkers, and that lens will shape how we develop innovative, scalable solutions.

We鈥檝e co-edited a book, , now in its second edition, which reflects our shared commitment to wisdom- and values-based leadership as a foundation for ethical practice in higher education.

How will the merger enhance your ability to impact higher education research, policy and practice nationally?

AK/JP: The merger allows us to expand into communities that have always been relevant. CERPP鈥檚 community will benefit from deeper access to researchers, research-practice partnerships and translational work that anchors our shared approach. Pullias will gain greater access to higher education enrollment professionals, high schools and districts across Southern California, especially through the .

How will the merged center position 海角论坛 as a national leader in higher education research, policy and practice?

JP: Over the past decade, I鈥檝e helped launch two research-practice partnerships and know that for research to have real impact, it must be both accessible and actionable. But uptake also requires trust, respect and mutual benefit. Across our projects, we鈥檝e built an extensive web of partnerships鈥攆rom graduate schools and disciplinary societies to national organizations like the American Council on Education and the Urban Institute. This merger enhances our collective ability to bring relational leadership and community-driven research to the most pressing challenges in higher education.

AK: Few centers nationally combine deep expertise in both access and student success, and even fewer are so well connected to community practice. The diversity of perspectives we bring鈥攕panning policy, psychology, sociology, organizational theory and leadership鈥攆osters multidisciplinary innovation that鈥檚 truly unique.

What are your hopes for the Center five years from now?

JP: In five years, I hope the Pullias name is even more widely known鈥攆or the impact of our work, the strength of our partnerships and our leadership in translational research. I also hope we continue the Center鈥檚 tradition of mentoring and training the next generation of scholars committed to equity and justice in higher education.

AK: I hope we see even more collaboration across projects, people and areas of focus鈥攗nlocking the kind of synergy that leads to real systems change. We鈥檒l need to be intentional to make this happen, and that鈥檚 where our co-directorship will be key. We鈥檙e already a national leader in research-practice partnerships, and this merger will only elevate our capacity.

What would you like to share with students, faculty and the wider higher education community about this merger?

JP: Academic research centers are at their best when they take their role as hubs seriously, and that means creating conditions to support people and communities with the best current evidence and cutting-edge theory, two currencies of the academies. This merger creates conditions and scope through which we can be maximally helpful to higher education at a critical time.

AK: This merged Center will have a tremendous impact on college access. We鈥檝e long led in this space鈥攁nd now, by directly connecting that work to student success, we鈥檒l be able to do even more.

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