The Harvard Graduate School of Education is not accepting applications to its Doctor of Education Leadership program for the 2026-2027 academic year as the program undergoes a redesign, according to HGSE spokesperson Paul Belsito.
The Ed.L.D., a three-year doctoral program that prepares students for senior roles in school districts, government agencies, and education nonprofits, is one of two fully-funded doctoral tracks at HGSE. Students admitted to the program receive full tuition coverage, a stipend, and a paid third-year residency placement.
Belsito wrote that the pause is tied to a planned overhaul of the program’s structure rather than financial pressure on the school.
“Characterizations that budget cuts have reduced admissions rates is not accurate,” he wrote in a statement. “The Ed.L.D. program is undergoing a planned programmatic redesign to ensure it continues to meet the evolving needs of learners and education leaders.”
Belsito added that HGSE is “experiencing a very strong admissions cycle” across its programs and “looks forward to welcoming a talented cohort this fall.”
The Ed.L.D. launched roughly 15 years ago and admits up to 25 students each year, drawing faculty from across Harvard’s schools. Its curriculum combines two years of coursework with a year-long residency at a partner organization — often a school district, state agency, foundation, or education startup.
Mary Grassa O’Neill, a senior lecturer affiliated with the program, said she had not been told of specific problems prompting the pause and understood the decision as a routine review of a program that had not been substantially revisited since its founding.
“This is a 15-year-old program,” O’Neill said. “The world has changed a lot in 15 years, and so they’re taking a look at it.”