Co-Principal
Investigators
Professor
Charles E. Daye, Brandis Professor of Law, University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Professor Daye joined
the University of North Carolina School of Law faculty in 1972.
and has studied and analyzed Constitutional law for over three decades.
He graduated from North Carolina Central University (B.A. magna
cum laude, 1966) and from Columbia University School of Law
(J.D. cum laude, 1969). He was President of the
Law School Admission Council in 1991 when LSAC initiated the Bar
Passage Study. His teaching and scholarship interests include
torts, housing and community development, administrative process
and advocacy, and social justice issues, such as assuring access
to the legal profession by members of under-represented minority
groups. He served as dean of the North Carolina Central University
School of Law (1981-85) and is co-author of a course book, Housing
and Community Development and co-author of a treatise,
North Carolina Law of Torts. Professor Daye participated in the
preparation of and co-signed the Amicus
Brief (pdf) that the law school submitted to the U.S. Supreme
Court in support of the University of Michigan School of Law in
the Grutter case.
Professor
Daye's curriculum vitae 

Dr.
Abigail T. Panter, Bowman and Gordon Gray Professor of Psychology (7.08),
L. L. Thurstone Psychometric Laboratory, University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill.
Dr. Panter is a quantitative psychologist who develops research designs and data-analytic
strategies for applied health and social issues such as HIV/AIDS and substance
abuse. She has degrees from Wellesley College (B.A.,1985) and New
York University (M.A.,1987; Ph.D., 1989). Her publications are
in the areas of measurement and test theory, multivariate data modeling,
program evaluation design, and individual differences (especially
personality). She also consults with The
Measurement Group in Culver City, California. Dr. Panter has
received numerous awards for her quantitative teaching including UNC's 2007 Carlyle Sitterson Freshman Teaching Award, the 2003 American Psychological
Association’s Jacob Cohen Award for Distinguished Teaching
and Mentoring (Division 5: Measurement, Statistics, and Evaluation),
and UNC’s Tanner Award for excellence in teaching at the undergraduate
level. She is also a three-time winner of her department’s
professor-of-the-year teaching award, has received UNC’s Access
Award for her work teaching students with learning disabilities,
and is on the executive committee of UNC’s Academy of Distinguished
Teaching Scholars. Dr. Panter regularly consults with federal agencies
on grant review, serves on national committees and advisory boards
in social/personality psychology and quantitative methods, and is
a Fellow of APA. She co-edited The
Sage Handbook of Methods in Social Psychology (2004) and three volumes on program evaluation and measuring
outcomes for HIV/AIDS multisite projects, and she coauthored an
online knowledge base for HIV/AIDS care.
Dr.
Panter's website
Dr.
Walter R. Allen, Professor of Education and the holder
of the Allan Murray Cartter Chair in Higher Education at the Graduate
School of Education and Information Studies in the University of
California, Los Angeles.
Dr. Allen is also Professor of Sociology at UCLA
and Co-Director of CHOICES, a longitudinal study of college access
and attendance among African Americans and Latinos in California.
Dr. Allen’s research and teaching focus on comparative race,
ethnicity and inequality; diversity in higher education; social
inequality; and family studies. His degrees in the field of
Sociology are from Beloit College (B.A., 1971) and the University
of Chicago (M.A., 1973; Ph.D., 1975). Dr. Allen has held teaching
appointments at the University of Michigan (1979-89) and the University
of North Carolina-Chapel Hill (1974-79) as well as Howard University,
Duke University, University of Zimbabwe and Wayne State University.
He has also worked as a consultant to courts, communities, foundations,
business and government.
Dr. Allen’s publications
include The Color Line and the Quality of Life in America
(1987); Enacting Diverse Learning Environments: Improving the
Climate for Racial/Ethnic Diversity in Higher Education Institutions
(1999); College in Black and White (1991); Black American
Families, 1965-84 (1986); Beginnings: The Social
and Affective Development of Black Children (1985); Stony
the Road: The Black Struggle for Higher Education in California
(2002); and African American Education: Race, Community, Inequality
and Achievement (2002). He was also guest co-editor of
“Comparative Perspectives on Black Family Life,” Journal
of Comparative Family Studies, and “Affirmative Action
in Higher Education,” Journal of Negro Education.
His numerous articles appear in the Harvard Educational Review,
Journal of Marriage and Family, Phylon, Sociological
Quarterly, National Black Law Journal, Signs, Social Science
and Medicine, Journal of General Internal Medicine,
and Research in Higher Education.
Dr. Allen's website
Dr. Allen's curriculum vitae 
Dr. Linda
F. Wightman, Professor, Educational Research Methodology
(retired), University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Dr. Wightman is an expert in educational
research methodology with a research emphasis on the role of race
in the law school setting. She joined the University of North Carolina
at Greensboro in 1997, after eight years as Vice-President of Operations,
Testing, and Research at the Law
School Admission Council. Dr. Wightman was the Principal Investigator
for the LSAC
National Longitudinal Bar Passage Study. This five million dollar
study spanned a period of eight years and provided a wealth of information
about law school students, legal education, and minority access
to the legal profession. Dr. Wightman also prepared numerous articles
and technical reports on the study, a public use database, and a
user's manual to make the data available to interested researchers.
Prior to her work at the LSAC and since receiving her Ed.D. from
Rutgers in 1982, Dr. Wightman held several major measurement and
statistician roles directing the School and Higher Education Programs
(SHEP) at the Educational
Testing Service.
Dr.
Wightman's curriculum vitae 
Other People on the EDP
Research Team
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