Jones was employed at 9 different higher education institutions during his 33-year academic career. Immediately after receiving his Ph.D., he chose to accept a Research Assistant Professor position at
Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. In 1963, he moved to
Fisk University in Nashville to become an assistant professor of psychology. He stayed for a year and advises the master's theses of William Hayes, Moses Johnson, and Angela Owens. He had a brief summer appointment with Indiana University before moving to UCLA in 1964 as an assistant professor of education. There, Jones worked with Frank M. Hewett to develop a Ph.D. program in special education. Until then, there was no doctoral program in special education at any of the University of California campuses. Jones helped develop and teach courses in areas of gifted and retarded education, recruit faculty for the program, and form partnerships with
California State University, Los Angeles. In 1966, he returned to
Ohio State University as an associate professor of psychology. After just two years, he was promoted to full professorship with tenure and was also appointed to Vice Chair for Staff Development. Jones then accepted professorship at
University of California, Riverside in their new School of Education. He was a faculty member for two years before becoming the department chair. In 1971, Jones moved his career abroad to become Director of the University Testing Center at Halle Sellassie I University in Ethiopia. He spent his two years there mostly responsible for developing admissions tests to the university. He then accepted a position as Professor of African American Studies and Education at the
University of California, Berkeley where he spent 17 years - the longest he spent at any one university. In addition to being a professor, he eventually held other academic and administrative positions at UC Berkeley. Finally, he left UC Berkeley in 1991 and Jones ended his career at
Hampton University as a department chair and Professor of Psychology. He stayed at Hampton until 2001 when he decided to retire. ==Historical context==