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Examining the STEM Educational Pipeline: The Influence of Pre-College Factors on the Educational Trajectory of African American StudentsTyler, Andrea L. 14 December 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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STRENGTH IN THE MIDST OF A PERFECT STORMJackson, Deborah L. 15 December 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Urban African American Adolescents’ Transitions to Schools in White Suburbia: A Phenomenological StudySeay, Nancy Parker January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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A Culturally Responsive Reading Intervention for African American Students At Risk for Reading FailureOif, Alana 01 September 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Chasing Vertical: Diversity & Recognition in the field of Graphic Design.Souza, Omari Abijah 08 August 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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"How are they being helped if I don't even know about it?": Adversity and pitfalls of twice exceptional urban learnersMayes, Renae Danielle 02 October 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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It’s about more than “just be consistent” or “out-tough them”: culturally responsive classroom managementHubbard, Terrance Michael 02 December 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Culturally Relevant Collective Responsibility among Teachers of African-American Students in a High Poverty Elementary SchoolGant, Monica Minor 02 September 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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THE RELATIONSHIP OF ETHNIC IDENTITY AND BICULTURAL COMPETENCE TO ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT AMONG URBAN AFRICAN-AMERICAN ADOLESCENTSPitts, Robynn January 2009 (has links)
This study examined ethnic identity and academic achievement among urban African-American adolescents and investigated how bicultural competence may be related to these variables. There is a dearth of literature in school psychology on how these variables relate to best practices for closing the achievement gap. Seventy-two students in the sixth through eighth grades from three urban parochial schools and one urban charter school participated in the study including African Americans (n=43) and students of other ethnicities (n=29). Students included in the Other category included those who self-identified as Latino, Mixed, Other, Asian American, and Native American. The sample was 65.3% female (n=47) and 34.7% male (n=25) with students who ranged in age from 11 to 15 years of age. Using a correlational design, the participants were interviewed at their schools using a brief demographics questionnaire and the Revised Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure (MEIM). Standardized test scores for each participant and information on socioeconomic status were also examined. No significant relationships were found between ethnic identity and any other variable in African-American adolescents or adolescents from other groups. As their grade levels increased, African-American students' levels of bicultural competence increased while their math achievement decreased. Students from other ethnicities who were high in bicultural competence had higher math achievement scores. Adolescent girls from the Other ethnicities group who were higher in bicultural competence tended to achieve more highly in math. Students from other ethnicities who were high in bicultural competence were less likely to receive free or reduced-price lunch. Students from other ethnicities whose parents were born in the United States were higher in bicultural competence than students in the same group whose parents were born outside the United States. This study indicated that academic achievement among urban adolescents can be consistent with a number of combinations of ethnic identities and levels of bicultural competence. The results of the present study suggest that, in order to help close the achievement gap, school psychologists and other decision makers should take socio-cultural and socioeconomic factors such as bicultural competence into consideration when making decisions for individual students and when affecting policy at the systems level. / School Psychology
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Academic, Research, and Social Self-Efficacy among African American Pre-McNair Scholar Participants and African American Post-McNair Scholar ParticipantsWilliams, Eric Garnell 03 November 2004 (has links)
College enrollment and graduation rates for African Americans remain lower than enrollment and graduation rates for middle and upper-class White students. The lower enrollment and graduation rates have an effect on the number of African American students who pursue the Ph.D. and other research doctorate degrees.
In order to increase the number of African Americans and other underrepresented students in the Ph.D. pipeline, the United States Congress passed legislation that created the Ronald E. McNair Postbaccalaureate Achievement Program (McNair Scholars Program) in the mid-1980s. The purpose of the McNair Scholars Program is to prepare college students for doctoral studies and careers in academia through involvement in summer research internships and other scholarly activities. One way in which this program may prepare students is through the development of students' academic, research and social self-efficacy. To date, however little research has been conducted to see if the McNair Scholars Program has an effect on African American students' levels of self-efficacy.
The purpose of this study was to compare levels of academic, research and social self-efficacy among African American pre- and post-McNair Scholar participants. Levels of self-efficacy were analyzed by McNair participant status (pre-McNair and post-McNair), gender, college and grade point average. The study employed a national sample of African American pre- and post McNair Scholar Program participants. Data were collected using the Graduate Education Self-Efficacy Scale (GESES), a 57-item instrument designed specifically for this study. Items for the survey were developed utilizing existing literature on academic, research and social self-efficacy.
Results revealed significant differences in academic, research and social self-efficacy between African American pre- and post-McNair Scholar Program participants. There were no significant differences by gender on academic, research or social self-efficacy. Neither were significant differences found by college grade level on academic or social self-efficacy. There were, however, significant differences based on college grade level on research self-efficacy. There were also significant interaction effects between gender and college grade level on academic, research and social self-efficacy. The results suggest that participating in the McNair Scholars Program raises levels of academic, research and social self-efficacy among African American college students. / Ph. D.
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