1 |
Education no longer deferred: the possibilities of educating urban african american males in a single gender school.James, Marlon C. 15 May 2009 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to investigate the emerging school culture of Excel
Academy for Boys [Pseudonym] located in the Southwestern region of the United States,
and how it contributes to the social and academic development of urban African
American male students. This case study was based on interviews and focus groups with
parents, teachers, students, and the school administrator. Additionally, the researcher
conducted participant observations of school meetings, new parent orientations, new
teacher interviews, and reviewed student academic and behavioral records. This
exploratory analysis consisted of two separate; but interrelated, qualitative studies
relevant to educating urban African American males.
The first inquiry featured a case study of Excel Academy for Boys, a singlegender
middle school serving urban African American males. This detailed examination
of Excel Academy’s organizational habitus yielded the Building African American
Males Model. This organizational process was characterized by four essential factors
that included: (1) educational justice; (2) expectations monitoring; (3) expectations casting; and (4) a culture of Effort. Particular attention was given to how each factor
promoted community-school synergy or organizational synergy. These processes were
essential for creating a school culture and climate that promoted the emotional, social,
and academic maturation of students. Implications for protecting and strengthening the
organizational habitus of Excel Academy were offered and broader implications for the
emerging African American males’ school movement were discussed.
The second study of Excel Academy uncovered four complexities that teachers,
parents, and the school leader encountered as they sought to meet the social, emotional,
and academic needs of urban African American males. These four critical complexities
emerged through observations of the educational processes at Excel Academy, and were
labeled: 1) expectations dissonance; 2) disguised engagement; 3) differential
engagement, and 4) expectations overload. The emergence of each factor was detailed,
and recommendations were offered to address each complexity.
|
2 |
A Comparison Study of Student Academic Performance by Male African American Students in a Traditional Public School and Male African American Students in a Single Gender AcademyWalker, Carlos L 05 1900 (has links)
A quantitative, causal-comparative study between single gender and traditional mixed gender schools was conducted to examine how single gender schooling affected the academic achievement of African American males in a high-poverty urban community. This study examined the differences in TSI and EOC scores between African American males who attended a single gender male high school and a traditionally mixed gender high school serving students in the same community in Fort Worth, Texas. A two sample t-test was used to compare the STAAR and TSI scores of the two groups of African American males. Microsoft Excel was used to collect the descriptive statistical data and analysis was conducted in SPSS version 25.0 for Windows. A detailed description of the participants, the research design that was used in the study, a description of instruments that was used to analyze the data, research problem, research questions on which the study was based, and a description of data analysis methods that was used. This quantitative research compared the STAAR and TSI scores in language arts, math, and reading. The findings of study indicate the single-gender school model impacts the academic achievement of African American males in a particular community in Fort Worth, Texas. The single-gender school had 100% of the African American males in its first graduating class during the 2017-2018 school year were accepted into college.
|
Page generated in 0.0934 seconds