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Black Males and the Emotional Disturbance Disability Label: A Leadership ProblemThomas, Valencia E. 24 September 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Off-Track: How Suburban High Schools Maintain Tracks for Black Boys within Diversity InitiativesBarnes, Cecil, 0000-0002-1328-3770 08 1900 (has links)
This study explored the implementation of a district-wide initiative to diversify advanced courses at two high schools in a northeastern suburban town. The focus of this exploration was Advanced Placement® courses. This study utilized convergent mixed methods multiple case study design. The data sources were interviews/focus groups, surveys, and enrollment data. The enrollment data contained Advanced Placement®, honors, and general education registrations from the 2015-2021 school years. The enrollment patterns were reported using odds ratios from multinomial logistic regressions. There was a statistically significant likelihood that Black boys were less likely than their peers to be enrolled in honors and Advanced Placement® courses than their peers at both schools. I examined the initiative through the lens of the racialization of the organizational routine of enrollment. The enrollment routine was routinized through the repetition of the process. It was racialized through the practices carried out by staff that produced racialized results. Institutional, curricular, and belief work were explored in the study. The institutional work did not produce the desired outcomes. Black boys’ honors enrollment data improved at one school site, but their Advanced Placement® enrollment data worsened. The study closes with implications and recommendations. / Policy, Organizational and Leadership Studies
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Counternarrative generators: educational systems and practices that produce academically successful young men of African descentCarter, Jr., William B. 11 July 2022 (has links)
This qualitative research project is a three publishable articles dissertation that centers on two counternarrative-based case studies on The Calculus Project, a school-based program that is a Counternarrative Generator — a program that has produced hundreds of living counternarratives since its conception. The focal population of living counternarratives within this research project is young men of African descent who have achieved high mathematical outcomes in secondary education. The research design for Article 1 is a standard literature review that serves as a Practitioners Guide for secondary educators focusing on school-based ideologies, systems, and methodologies that produce high academic outcomes for males of African descent. Article 2 is a single-instrument, narrative case study that tells the story of The Calculus Project from the vantage point of the founder, Dr. Adrian Mims, from vision to program implementation. Article 3 is a narrative, collective case study which tells the story of The Calculus Project from the vantage points of three tiers of young men of African descent — participants in their final year of the program (Tier 1) and program graduates who are either in college (Tier 2) or have graduated from college (Tier 3) — that reveal personal testimonies regarding the powerful impact The Calculus Project had on the young men. Through careful data analysis, there were three observed themes in Article 2, seven observed themes in Article 3, and an observed overlap between the desired aims of the founder and the actual impact the program had on the participants. / 2029-07-31T00:00:00Z
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EFFECTS OF PRACTICE-BASED COACHING INTERVENTION ON PRESCHOOL TEACHERS’ RESPONSES TO BLACK BOYS’ NEGATIVE EMOTION EXPRESSIONCatherine, Evandra 01 January 2019 (has links)
Current research indicates that caregivers’ responses and behaviors to young children’s emotion expressions communicate messages that teach young children how to understand, label, recognize and modify emotions in socially desirable ways. This process is referred to as emotion socialization. This topic is timely and relevant due to the large numbers of preschoolers suspended and expelled each year. Several reports indicate that 50,000 preschoolers are suspended each year and that Black boys are the largest recipients of such actions. Black boys comprise just 19% of preschool enrollment, but 45% of male suspensions. In addition, data show that preschool teachers expect challenging behavior to occur when Black boys are present, even when there is no challenging behavior. Cultural and contextual factors such as child’s race/ethnicity, gender, social status, are also influencing differences in preschool caregiver’s emotion socialization behaviors.
The goal of this study was to examine whether a professional development (PD) model increases preschool teachers’ use of emotionally supportive responses to the negative emotion expressions of Black boys with low levels of emotional competence. The research design was a multiple-baseline across participants design. There were two Black female teacher participants and the model was implemented in a private not-for profit center and a non-profit center that targeted families and children at risk for developmental delays. Findings from the study showed a functional relation between the PD model and teachers’ use of emotionally supportive instructional practices. Implications for the future include examining the impact of setting on implementation of the PD model using a multiple baseline across settings design and examining the role of teachers’ thoughts and beliefs about negative emotion expressions on teachers’ use of emotionally supportive responses.
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The Inequities of Gifted Identification and Support for "Potentially" Gifted Black Students in an Urban School District in Ohio.Williams, Leah Theresa 31 October 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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What does it mean to a Black man in the United States of America?Snyder, Nerissa Lovella Rea 15 February 2019 (has links)
Scarce is the research on the effects of the social and political climates of the Civil Rights era on children of that time. Comparisons are made throughout these writings between that era and the social and political climates that exist today in the United States of America. Specifically, the effects of these climates on Black males are examined across contexts. To better understand the Black male perspective, this body of research contributes to filling the gap of scarce research about older Black men, exploring lived experiences of eight African-American and Black men, 66-78 years of age, through first person interviews. A phenomenological research design and first person interviews allowed the researcher to find themes in the lived experiences of these men. Some of their life experiences (e.g., experiencing racism and disrespect related to being Black men), parallel the research findings throughout the literature review about the life experiences of generations of younger Black males that are coming behind them. Six themes were drawn, from the lived experiences of these men, to answer two research questions that guided the study. Those themes are: 1) personal experience with discrimination, racism or prejudice, 2) the need for strong familial support, 3) the importance of being aware of differences, 4) learning about your-self, 5) giving back to family and community and, 6) views about the need for counseling. From this research, implications are made for counselors, counselor educators and community advocates. / EDD / There are not a lot of research articles that follow the lives of children that lived through the Civil Rights Era, specifically young Black boys of that time. That era was full of social and political climates that the researcher compares to the social and political climates that exist as recently as the time of these writings in 2018. In this research study, the researcher interviewed eight African-American and Black men, ages 66-78, about their experiences living as men in the United States of America. Their life experiences are filled with lessons about racism, building positive family support, learning about yourself, taking care of responsibilities and community advocacy, to name a few. One of many potential benefits of these experiences is the impact it can have on young Black boys today who are living through social and political climates like those that the men interviewed lived through. The men interviewed were able to look back on their lives as young men and offer words of wisdom and advice to young Black men today. These words of wisdom and research have the potential to benefit the way mental health clinicians provide care for their clients, the way community members advocate for their young Black male citizens and the way police interact with citizens, specifically young Black men. For the purpose of this research, African-American is the term used to describe an American of African and especially of black African descent. Black is the term used to describe a person having origins in any of the Black racial groups of Africa. The men interviewed were also asked about their view of respect which, for this research, is defined as: high or special regard: the quality or state of being esteemed.
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My Brothers' KeeperTaylor, Kimberly L. 17 April 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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