Karolyn Tyson
Georgetown University
Professor and Chair

Year Elected

2021

Membership status

Regular
Karolyn Tyson is Professor and Chair of Sociology at Georgetown University. Her program of research centers on understanding racial inequality in educational outcomes and how race matters in the educational experience of American students and their families. She uses qualitative research methods to study the critical role of institutions and the ways in which people make sense of and respond to their environments. By investigating the interplay between institutions and actors, her research has revealed important mechanisms driving racial disparities in schooling outcomes. Professor Tyson is the author of Integration Interrupted, winner of the 2011 Bourdieu Best Book Award from the Sociology of Education section of the American Sociological Association. She was a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) and at the Russell Sage Foundation. She has served as chair of the ASA Sociology of Education section and co-director of the University of North Carolina's Moore Undergraduate Research Apprentice Program (MURAP). Professor Tyson has a B.A. in sociology from Spelman College and a MA and Ph.D. in sociology from the University of California, Berkeley.