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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
151

Taken Over: The Story of the Locke High School Takeover Through a Qualitative Study of Student Voice

Beardall, Joshua Michael 01 July 2011 (has links)
In Los Angeles, the charter movement has gained incredible momentum as Charter Management Organizations take over troubled public schools in working class neighborhoods and communities of color. In Watts, a Latino and African American working class neighborhood, Locke High School had long stood as a troubled school in the Los Angeles Unified School District. After decades of low test scores, violence, and astronomical dropout rates, Green Dot Public Schools took over the campus and, in 2008, opened Locke as a public charter school under its management. This study examined the perceptions, experiences, and stories of five 12th-grade students at Locke whose high school was taken over. These students described the impact this charter takeover had on their social, academic, and personal lives. Using qualitative research methodology, this study utilized student-created photo essays, in-depth semistructured interviews, and a focus group. Though the media prematurely labeled the takeover a success, the students‘ views differed. They described how the takeover helped them academically, but failed to give them a rigorous college preparatory curriculum. The takeover also failed to meet their social needs. These students discussed how the takeover improved the Locke campus, but failed to make ongoing improvements throughout the school. Students offered their stories and counterstories to the mainstream media, which applauded the changed atmosphere. They reminisced about the past, mourned social loss, complained of uniforms and strict compliance to rules, and hoped for additional changes. These students added personal voices to the takeover of their high school.
152

TELLING THE “OTHER” STORY BEYOND THE “MODEL MINORITY” AND “JUVENILE DELINQUENT”: HMONG AMERICAN STUDENTS’ EXPERIENCES IN SECONDARY EDUCATION

Thoeun, Chanthou 01 January 2016 (has links)
Although Hmong students are among the lowest demographic to enter college, the “model minority” myth continues to mischaracterize the unwavering success of Asian Americans across all educational levels. Furthermore, the “model minority” myth continues to uphold master narratives that silence the voices of Hmong American students whose educational experiences deviate quite drastically from their East Asian counterparts due to traumatic social-political contexts that continue to exert influence on their migration in the United States. Utilizing AsianCrit as a lens, the purpose of this narrative study was to explore Hmong American students’ perceptions of how race impacts their secondary educational experiences. The study suggests that race, gender, gangs, language work in complex ways to shape how Hmong American students perceive race in education and their choices within educational settings at the secondary level as they transition to post-secondary education. In addition, the study identifies three additional themes that gesture toward the manner in which Hmong American students make sense of their racial and cultural identity in the space of education.
153

The Invisible Genocide: Framing Violence Against Native Peoples in America

Weiss, Nicole Marie January 2020 (has links)
No description available.
154

The Recruitment of Black Student-Athletes by White Head Coaches at Predominately White Institutions

Samad, Moetiz Yasser 27 May 2021 (has links)
No description available.
155

"There will be no Reconciliation": The Science Fiction Culture War of White Supremacist Puppies

Kreiter, Michael P. 20 April 2021 (has links)
No description available.
156

Singing Our Songs in a Strange Land: A Phenomenological Study of Black Male Music Educators

Mallette, Wayne January 2023 (has links)
This hermeneutic phenomenological study explored the lived experiences of five Black male music educators (BMMEs) in the northeastern United States. Of the four million educators across the country, recent studies show that only 1.9% identify as Black males, which is a decrease from six percent in 2008. The purpose of the study was to gain a deeper understanding of the influences and lived experiences of these Black male music educators, with the goal of creating music educational spaces within schools that better support Black male musicians. The researcher conducted a series of three interviews with each educator, which focused on their K-12 formative musical experiences, their collegiate music education, and their work as classroom music educators. In addition to two focus group sessions with the five educators, the researcher conducted three teaching observations. The theoretical framework for this study was Critical Race Theory. The study took place in the span of four months in the fall of 2022. The interviews and classroom observations were analyzed by finding themes within them and reading them in the context of the entire interview to gain a deeper understanding of the lived experience of the participants. The findings illustrated the participants’ lived experience through a series of primary themes: family support, strong mentors/teachers, talent identified by others, resilience, isolation, Black church music influence, high expectations in teaching, and creating community.
157

HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT: A QUANTCRIT, INTERSECTIONAL ANALYSIS OF DUAL ENROLLMENT

Winfield, Jake, 0000-0001-6181-8664 January 2023 (has links)
The COVID-19 pandemic has threatened to widen racial educational achievement and attainment gaps in the United States, reinforcing a need to understand how education policy can work to advance racial equity. Dual enrollment (DE) programs offer a potential policy solution that could increase college-going for these students as participation has consistently been associated with increased rates of college-going and completion. These prior findings are heterogeneous among student demographics. This study expands on this prior research on DE by examining how access to DE and benefits from participation may have differential benefits based one’s intersectional identities. Using a critical quantitative framework, QuantCrit, and multiple national datasets this study investigates three related questions. First, using IPEDS and the American Community Survey and logistic regression I investigate how do demographics of areas of the United States with limited access to widely accessible colleges and universities (called college access deserts) vary from those with greater access? I then consider access to DE with the U.S. Department of Education’s Civil Rights Data Collection: 2017-18 and linear probability models by examining how access to DE varied across the United States, with attention to Black females and males. Finally, with the High School Longitudinal Study of 2009 and linear probability models, I investigate if participation in DE is associated with increased probabilities of attending postsecondary education and does this association vary for Black people based on their gender. I find that areas of the United States that have less access to widely accessible public colleges have lower proportions of Black people, but higher proportions of American Indian/Alaskan Native residents. Analysis of the Civil Rights Data Collection indicates that high schools with less access to widely accessible public colleges were more likely to offer DE. However, schools with higher percentages of Black students and male students are less likely to offer DE. The HSLS analysis shows that DE is positively associated with postsecondary attendance. Of postsecondary enrollees, DE participants were more likely to enroll in four-year institutions, but this increased probability may vary by gender as female DE participants had greater increased probabilities of enrolling in four-year institutions than male DE participants. Taken together, this study’s findings indicate that DE can be a policy to advance postsecondary attendance for all students – however current access is racialized. These findings show that expanding DE for all students could increase postsecondary attendance. I conclude with recommendations for dual enrollment programs to broaden access in areas of the United States with widely accessible public colleges and the utility of open science and anti-racist quantitative methods in educational research. / Policy, Organizational and Leadership Studies
158

Racializing International Student Discourse in the United States: Recommendations for Counseling Psychology and Narratives from Asian Indian International Students

Aashna Bharat Aggarwal (16456071) 27 June 2023 (has links)
<p>International students are integral in U.S. higher education institutions, and research demonstrates that these students face a range of concerns, with race and racism being understudied. In this dissertation, I present two chapters highlighting the racialized experiences of international students of color. In the first theoretical chapter, I connected international student literature to tenets of Critical Race Theory. I ended with specific recommendations for the field of counseling psychology. In the second empirical chapter, I conducted a narrative inquiry and interviewed 6 Asian Indian international students about how they formed understandings of race and racism in the United States. Through using reflexive thematic analysis, four themes of antiessentialism and intersectionality, social construction of race, sources of racial construction, and impacts of racial construction were developed. Using these results, I provided insights into how international students from India may understand race and implications for clinical practice, higher education, and research. </p>
159

When Transracial Adoption Goes in Another Direction

Patel, Habiba January 2020 (has links)
This study aims to understand the experience of a non-White family trying to adopt a transracial child. ‘Transracial adoption’ is defined as a family adopting a child from a different race than theirs. My overarching focus is on how society comes to understand transracial adoption as a one-way transfer of minority children into White families, however, when the roles are reversed there is a lack of acceptance for minority families adopting transracially – specifically, when the adoptive child is White. The purpose of my study is to share my mine and mother’s life experience of fostering, social workers, child welfare and adoption so that minorities who are looking to adopt transracially may use mine and/or my mother’s life experience to help guide their adoption process if they feel they are being discriminated against. This study will also explore motivations, values, ethics and possible biases regarding transracial adoptions. Highlighting the contradictions that exist in transracial adoption practices I will use my own research as a platform for awareness of how social work practice can influence the lives of minorities who would like to adopt transracially, and for the need at both a macro and micro to create clearer transracial adoption policies for minority and White families. / Thesis / Master of Social Welfare (MSW)
160

WHY IMMIGRANTS WANT TO LEAVE CANADA: THE STRUGGLE OF CANADIAN UNIVERSITY GRADUATE IMMIGRANTS IN THE LABOUR MARKET

Uzair, Ambreen January 2014 (has links)
The purpose of this paper is to explore the personal, cultural and structural experiences and barriers faced by highly skilled Canadian university graduate immigrants regarding finding a good job related to their qualification in the labour market, and how this struggle has shaped their lives. Data was collected through individuals by semi-structured questionnaires. Interviews were the deep source of skilled immigrants’ experiences and problems they have faced in the labour market. Applying the critical race theory perspective and using the Thompson PCS Model as investigating tool, this study sought to capture the participants’ reality. The findings suggest that immigrants are facing many structural and systemic barriers and racial discrimination in the labour market. It is affecting them not only individually but also affecting their families and because of that these skilled immigrants have a plan to leave Canada for better job opportunities because even after graduating from Canadian universities they were unable to find work according to their field of study and work experience. Major themes emerging from this research include: why skilled immigrants pursued more education if they were already graduated from their home countries; immigration policies and labour market policies mismatch; non-recognition of immigrants credentials and work experience; inadequate settlement services; racial discrimination in job market; and what difference they feel before and after graduating from Canadian university in finding a job. / Thesis / Master of Social Work (MSW)

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