Gittell's teaching career spanned six decades and was spent entirely within the City University of New York (CUNY). Gittell began teaching in the department of Political Science at Queens College, CUNY in 1960. She remained in the department until 1971 when she founded the Urban Studies department and became its department chair. During her time at Queens College, Gittell also co-founded the Urban Studies department there and directed the
Institute for Community Studies. In 1973, she became associate provost and assistant vice president of Brooklyn College, CUNY. At the time, she was the highest-ranking woman at the college. She remained at Brooklyn College until 1978 when she joined the Political Science department at the CUNY Graduate Center and directed the Howard Samuels State Management and Policy Center. She served in these capacities until her death in 2010. A posthumous collection of selected works by Gittell, entitled
Activist Scholar, highlights three key themes in her work: education reform and citizen participation, community-based organizations and community organizing, and women's leadership, social capital, and social change. In the 1990s, her research on education reform and community development organizations was supported by grants from the
Ford Foundation, the
MacArthur Foundation, and the
National Science Foundation. == Conflict at Ocean Hill-Brownsville and New York City teacher's strike of 1968 ==