Leaders for Justice Restoring Dignity in Urban Schools Through the Narratives of Black and Latinx Parents
Document Type
Presentation
Presentation Date
4-21-2020
Abstract or Description
Roundtable presentation at the American Educational Research Association Annual Meeting (Conference cancelled due to Covid-19)
A pernicious trend in urban education in the US is an exodus of children from schools. This has resulted in declining resources, teacher and staff layoffs, and cash-poor and land rich school districts. To understand what is responsible for this trend as well as to recognize how leaders for social justice may improve educational outcomes for students, the researchers launched a mixed-method study with African-American and Latinx parents whose children attended a large urban school district with declining enrollment. The paper shares the parents’ narratives generated in focus group sessions. The narratives revealed improving academic offerings, reducing class size, increasing school staff, fostering humanistic relationships and embracing diversity are essential for restoring dignity in urban schools and stopping declining enrollment
Sponsorship/Conference/Institution
American Educational Research Association Annual Meeting
Location
San Francisco, CA
Source
https://convention2.allacademic.com/one/aera/aera20/index.php?program_focus=view_paper&selected_paper_id=1569400&cmd=online_program_direct_link&sub_action=online_program
Recommended Citation
Porfilio, Bradley J., Peggy Shannon-Baker, Barbara Plough, Charles Wilson.
2020.
"Leaders for Justice Restoring Dignity in Urban Schools Through the Narratives of Black and Latinx Parents."
Department of Curriculum, Foundations, & Reading Faculty Presentations.
Presentation 285.
source: https://convention2.allacademic.com/one/aera/aera20/index.php?program_focus=view_paper&selected_paper_id=1569400&cmd=online_program_direct_link&sub_action=online_program
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/curriculum-facpres/285