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An exploratory examination of “pockets of success” in creating urban high schools of opportunity for LSES studentsUnknown Date (has links)
The purpose of this exploratory study was to examine “pockets of success”
through the voices of participant stakeholders in low socio-economic status urban high
schools and communities to identify opportunities and structures that can improve postsecondary outcomes for students. Examining those pockets of success to rise above the dynamics that obstruct pathways to success, and identifying opportunities for students to transcend their social, economic, and human condition, are the impetuses for the study. The study design is grounded in portraiture, created by Lawrence-Lightfoot and Hoffman-Davis (1997), to detail the intricate dynamics and relationships that exist in high schools. Portraiture steps outside of the traditional boundaries of quantitative and qualitative research to converge narrative analysis with public discourse in a search for authenticity. Identifying what the participants value, how they create and promote opportunities for students, the school’s role in rebuilding the surrounding community, and the community’s priority for graduates, provided the groundwork. The review of the literature reconstructs the term “opportunity” in the context of the urban high school, aligning it with the moral purposes of education. It traces the history of educational and social justice barriers for minority students, outlines the impact of leadership decision-making on the evolution of the urban high school, and addresses increasing the capacity of schools to create opportunities for students to succeed. Participants revealed the foundations for success, challenges and goals toward success, conduits to facilitate that success, and collaborations required to build an agenda to couple school-based stakeholders, civic groups, and national organizations to the creation of a national platform to improve outcomes for urban public high school students in disenfranchised communities. / Includes bibliography. / Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2013.
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Personal teaching efficacy and ethnic attributions as contributors to caucasian preservice teachers' behavior toward international childrenBurt, Linda S. 04 May 1993 (has links)
Two theoretical models were examined based on the contributions of
preservice teachers' personal teaching efficacy, ethnic causal attributions, past
teaching, and international interaction experiences to their behaviors toward
international children in multicultural small group activity sessions. Path analytic
results revealed that for both models, these variables together did not significantly
predict the positive or negative behavior of preservice teachers. T-tests, applied
to positive and negative behaviors indicated that these behaviors varied
significantly based on the child's gender and classroom activity type. Aspects of
gender and activity type were included in an additional exploratory analysis of 16
path models. Only six were significant, although even these did not explain a
large percentage of the variance associated with preservice teachers' behaviors.
Personal teaching efficacy had a significant direct positive impact on the
frequency and quality of positive behaviors displayed by preservice teachers
toward international girls during unstructured table activities. However, the
ethnic attribution variable of locus of causality had a significant direct positive
impact on the frequency and quality of positive behaviors displayed by preservice
teachers toward international boys during structured storytime activities. In
addition, teacher preparation level and past international interaction experience
had a significant direct negative impact on the frequency and quality of negative
behaviors, respectively displayed by preservice teachers toward international boys
during unstructured table activities. Finally, among these significant path models
(a) teacher preparation level and past international interaction experiences made
significant direct positive impacts on the causal attribution variables of locus of
causality and stability; (b) the causal attribution variable of stability had a
significant direct negative impact on controllability, and (c) the significant path
coefficients between personal teaching efficacy and the causal attribution variable
of stability were positive, while those associated with controllability were negative.
In a secondary analysis, differences between preservice teachers' behaviors
toward international and U.S. children as a result of children' s ethnicity, gender,
age, socioeconomic status, and involvement in different types of small group
activities were examined, applying a multivariate analysis of variance. Positive
behaviors displayed by preservice teachers were significantly lower for international
than for U.S. children, while the converse was true for negative behaviors.
In addition, both positive and negative behaviors displayed toward girls were
significantly lower than for boys. Preservice teachers also displayed significantly
more negative behaviors toward children during structured storytime than unstructured
table activities. Overall, however, preservice teachers exhibited more
positive than negative behaviors toward both international and U.S. children. / Graduation date: 1993
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National integration: education for ethnic minorities of the Lao People's Democratic RepublicFaming, Manynooch. January 2008 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Sociology / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Teacher emotions: autoethnography of a Hong Kong teacher who begins to teach ethnic minority students ChineseHo, Kam-kau, Elizabeth., 何劍翹. January 2013 (has links)
This research is a journey of mine, as a CSL (Chinese as second language) teacher, using autoethnographical method to explore my own emotions and professional growth in the teaching of Chinese language to EM students.
This research is a study of self-exploration. To make it simple, the autoethnography is written in accordance to the natural sequence of my self-exploration. First, I have chosen to report some of my raw experiences over the two-and-half years of teaching with the 2009 and 2010 cohorts of EM students (S2 and S1) as significant critical incidents that form the basis of my layers of reflection. They form the primary domain of the study.
The writing is structured according to the classification suggested by Schon:
1. Reflection in Action: This part of the writing provides rich description of a series of critical incidents or episodes and my thoughts and feelings in the incidents. In writing each incident, the memory brings me back to the time and some instant reflection (usually filled, with some heavy emotions, confusion which needs clarity) may also be added to the description. The ‘Reflection in Action’ with the 2 cohorts of students is reported in two separate chapters.
2. Reflection on Action: After each ‘Reflection in Action’ chapter (which is mainly narratives of the critical incidents), there is a ‘Reflection on Action’ chapter which provides more in-depth analysis and reflection of my experience. With the 2009 cohort (S2 students), the associated ‘Reflection on Action’ is structured around the various emotions and relations experienced. And then with the 2010 cohort (S1 students), the associated ‘Reflection on Action’ is structured around my roles, values and cultural conflicts in the experience.
3. ‘Reflection for Action’: After I have completed ‘Reflection on Action’ on my experience to these two groups of students, I then make an overall reflection. The intention is to develop a better conceptualization of the whole experience and develop some theory that can serve as direction for my future practice, or hypothesis for consideration and future research by others.
Before writing this final ‘Reflection for Action’, to provide a more valid and reliable basis for it, I interview some students (those involved in some of the significant incidents), three teachers from my school and three other teachers from other educational institutions. (One is a teaching staff working at the University of Hong Kong, one is from a Band 2 secondary school with lot of EM students, and the last one is a teaching staff working in a subsidized secondary school with some EM students.) Having the private talk with students can give me more insight on how some issues are seen from the students’ side. In the interviews, the critical incidents are used as stimulus together with questions which are designed for sharing emotions and enhancing understanding.
After the final ‘Reflection for Action’, I will reflect on how the process of autoethographic writing and try to share with readers its values in teacher growth and other practical knowledge on using this methodology, including its strengths and limitations.
In reflecting on my interaction, relation and emotions with students, I found my weaknesses; but I also came to realize fear existed in most of us. The way we handled our fear reflects our values and attitudes and in turn affected the fear of others. Our students also had their fear. The cultures of my students and me, and the differences, had made a great impact on our understanding of each other, and hence our emotional feelings towards each perceptions on cultural identity, and I tried to match the cultural strategies I learnt from literature with the cultural strategies practiced by me and my students. I also began to question how I saw (and would need to see) myself as their teacher, and respond to the
differences between us. The issue of a teacher’s self and its formation in intercultural teaching then also became the focus of the study.
In the end, you may ask, ‘what do you get from writing this autoethnographic research? In this teaching journey: teaching Chinese to the non-Chinese, you may ask, is teaching pedagogy very important fro students to learn better? Yes. But apart from teaching pedagogy, we need to take other issues into consideration. The issue of emotions and intercultural difference often emerges during the process of teaching and learning especially when teaching with ethnic minority students and this we need to take it into consideration to make the teaching of ethnic minority more smooth. To make the teaching of ethnic minority successful, we also need to understand our limitations and be accommodating, positive and show understanding to our students. In short, in the process of autoethnographic study, I have learned from lived experience. Through layers of reflection in different perspectives and different timing: reflection, it allows me to have some space to understand myself, show respect to others: students, parents and colleagues. We learn when we teach and we grow when we nurture our students with understanding and teach them with the virtue of gratitude. / published_or_final_version / Education / Doctoral / Doctor of Education
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Mental models of diverse, high achieving elementary schools in TexasBenson, James Ray 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Self-determination and postsecondary transition planning for culturally and linguistically diverse students with learning disabilitiesTrainor, Audrey Ann 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Teaching AVID: an investigation of pedagogy in a college prepatory program for traditionally underserved youthLipovski, Leslie Crawford 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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High stakes testing : it's intended and unintended consequences on minority and economically disadvantaged high school studentsAlexander, Vern Louis 23 June 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Minority student perception of Tomball College : implications of how perceptions effect student life and college attendanceBrandyburg, Lawrence Duane 03 August 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Social and educational adjustment of West Indian students in a Montreal high schoolHayes, Victor Archibald. January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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