Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration (3)
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (3)
- Adult and Continuing Education (2)
- Education Policy (2)
- Educational Leadership (2)
-
- Arts and Humanities (1)
- Business (1)
- Educational Administration and Supervision (1)
- Educational Technology (1)
- First and Second Language Acquisition (1)
- Higher Education Administration (1)
- History (1)
- Liberal Studies (1)
- Linguistics (1)
- Peace and Conflict Studies (1)
- Social and Philosophical Foundations of Education (1)
- Keyword
-
- Achievement gap (1)
- Adult education (1)
- Alternative history (1)
- Black Families (1)
- Boston (1)
-
- Communication Technology (1)
- Community college (1)
- Conflict resolution (1)
- Counterfactual history (1)
- Cultural historical activity theory (1)
- Disorienting dilemma (1)
- English for Speakers of Other Languages (1)
- Evaluation (1)
- Family Engagement (1)
- High impact practices (1)
- History education (1)
- Middle school education (1)
- Neoliberalism (1)
- Organizational culture (1)
- Parent Involvement (1)
- Peace education (1)
- Student success (1)
- Students of color (1)
- Teacher cognition (1)
- Transformational (1)
- Transformative learning (1)
- Transformative teaching (1)
- Urban Education (1)
- Values conflicts (1)
- Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (1)
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Education
Black Family Engagement Through Communication Technology: A Phenomenological Study From The Perspective Of Urban Public High Schools Parents In The Greater Boston Area, Mariette Bien-Aime Ayala
Black Family Engagement Through Communication Technology: A Phenomenological Study From The Perspective Of Urban Public High Schools Parents In The Greater Boston Area, Mariette Bien-Aime Ayala
Graduate Doctoral Dissertations
Black family engagement is the key to improving the life outcomes of young Black students (Clark, 2015; Mestry & Grobler, 2007). Recently, as a response to a need for better family engagement in K-12 education, new technologies have emerged. As educators, it is important to study the effectiveness of these new communication technologies, as well as how Black families are experiencing opportunities for engagement through them. Guided by critical race theory and capital theory, I ask: How do Black families experience opportunities for engagement with their children’s high schools through the use of communication technologies? To find this answer, in …
Teaching For Transformation: Enabling The Exploration Of Disorienting Dilemma In The Classroom, Lisa Deangelis
Teaching For Transformation: Enabling The Exploration Of Disorienting Dilemma In The Classroom, Lisa Deangelis
Graduate Doctoral Dissertations
While learning involves the acquisition of new skills and the development of existing repertoires, some educators harbor even more profound learning goals. They seek to enable learning that is transformative. Jack Mezirow, who is credited with establishing transformative learning theory, defines transformative learning as “an enhanced level of awareness of the context of one's beliefs and feelings, a critique of their assumptions and particularly premises, an assessment of alternative perspectives, a decision to negate an old perspective in favor of a new one or to make a synthesis of old and new, an ability to take action based upon the …
Adult Educators At The Crossroads Of Language Learning And Workforce Development: A Qualitative Study Of Teacher Agency, Liz Ging
Graduate Masters Theses
Since the passage of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) in 2014, there has been renewed questioning about the nature and purpose of adult education programs in the United States, including English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL). The heavy workforce development orientation of the new law is a starker manifestation of trends focused on job training which have been sweeping through the field of adult education for the last few decades. In the midst of these shifts, little research has been done to investigate what the educators charged with meeting these policy goals think about these changes, the …
Multiperspectivity Through Alternative History In The Classroom, Anggita Parameswari Latif
Multiperspectivity Through Alternative History In The Classroom, Anggita Parameswari Latif
Graduate Masters Theses
This paper aims to evaluate existing teaching approaches in middle school history classrooms that incorporate alternative history materials. Alternative history focuses on the question of what might have happened differently, or ‘what if?’ The study focuses on addressing the following question: How does the understanding of one event’s significance on the chain of historical occasions contribute to students’ engagement in discussing past and current conflicts, based on teachers’ points of view? Interviews with 10 education practitioners focused on exploring the ways students can learn to see history creatively while developing tolerance. Existing approaches are explored through the viewpoints of conflict …
Organizational Culture In Community Colleges: Making Connections To Diverse Student Success, Darcy A. Orellana
Organizational Culture In Community Colleges: Making Connections To Diverse Student Success, Darcy A. Orellana
Graduate Doctoral Dissertations
The lack of equitable educational outcomes for students of color continues to be a glaring problem for community colleges. Community colleges are challenged to find solutions to address long-standing achievement gaps. One institutional response has been to implement high impact practices (HIPs) as a means to improve persistence, retention, and graduation rates for all students. HIPs, however, have produced mixed results in terms of enhancing student success, and evidence suggests that students of color participate in fewer HIPs and thus receive less benefit from them. This study considers the proposition that students of color may decide not to participate in …