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Showing 1 to 15 of 25 results Save | Export
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Oliva, Nereida; Alemán, Enrique, Jr. – Educational Policy, 2019
This article presents findings from a qualitative research study conducted with and for Latina mother leaders. Using a "muxerista" (womanist) framework, we demonstrate how Latina mother leaders articulate forms of leadership to advocate for their children and utilize leadership strategies in the development of educational policy such as…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Mothers, Leadership Qualities, Advocacy
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Carruba-Rogel, Zuleyma; Durán, Richard P.; Solis, Bertin – Peabody Journal of Education, 2019
A case study of a Latinx parent-school engagement program is presented illustrating how immigrant parents became collective political actors providing input into their California school district's formulation of its Local Control Accountability Plan (LCAP). The LCAP was part of newly adopted statewide Local Control Funding Formula policy providing…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Family Literacy, Parents, Parent School Relationship
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Jochim, Ashley; Gross, Betheny; McCann, Colleen – Center on Reinventing Public Education, 2017
Washington, D.C., has looked to school choice as one way to improve educational outcomes for disadvantaged students. School choice attempts to "level the playing field" between students of different backgrounds by making it possible for all families to have access to a city's high-quality public schools--whether students live near these…
Descriptors: School Choice, Educational Change, Educational Quality, Access to Education
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Haneda, Mari; Sherman, Brandon – Journal of Language, Identity, and Education, 2018
Worldwide, countries strive for effective ways to educate migrant children, and the United States is no exception. In this context, this qualitative study examines how a group of ESL teachers in U.S. elementary schools acted agentively and redesigned their work through "job crafting" (Wrzesniewskum & Dutton, 2001) so as to provide…
Descriptors: School Organization, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Scribner, Samantha M. Paredes; Fernández, Erica – Educational Policy, 2017
This article presents results from community-engaged research conducted with Latinx immigrant parents advocating for their students and themselves in and around an urban school engaged in multiple reforms, in a context affected by anti-immigrant policies and sentiments. The authors analyzed the intersection of organizing narratives related to…
Descriptors: Organizational Climate, Organizational Culture, Parent Participation, Politics of Education
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Feuerstein, Abe – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2015
This paper examines the discursive strategies employed by advocates of Parent Trigger laws in the United States which allow parents of children in "failing" schools, in some states, to call for interventions in the operation of the schools via petition. The paper reviews the genesis of Parent Trigger laws, the network of conservative…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Laws, School Choice, Educational Change
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Quinn, Rand; Carl, Nicole Mittenfelner – Penn GSE Perspectives on Urban Education, 2013
Urban districts throughout the nation are contending with declining enrollment, aging facilities in disrepair, persistently low student achievement, increased competition with charters, and severe fiscal constraints. Philadelphia is a case in point. Over the past year, the School District of Philadelphia (SDP) was forced to borrow $304 million…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Activism, Advocacy, Parent Participation
Kelly, Andrew P. – American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 2014
Families are the primary clients of public schools, but they are one of many constituencies who have a say in how schools actually operate. In all the technocratic fervor around "education reform"--the broad effort to implement standards and accountability, reform teacher tenure and evaluation, and increase parental choice--it is easy to…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Public Schools, Accountability, Parent Participation
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Silin, Jonathan, Ed. – Bank Street College of Education, 2018
In this issue of the Occasional Paper Series describes practices and policies that impact the early schooling of children of immigrants in the United States. The authors consider the intersectionality of young children's lives and what needs to change in order to ensure that race, class, immigration status, gender, and dis/ability can effectively…
Descriptors: Young Children, Immigrants, Educational Policy, Educational Practices
Hess, Frederick M.; Lautzenheiser, Daniel K. – American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 2012
While US parents have historically played supporting roles in schooling, they are becoming increasingly involved in education advocacy and policy. Contemporary school reform requires political muscle to enact controversial changes, meaning entrenched interest groups such as teachers unions have traditionally enjoyed an outsized impact in the realm…
Descriptors: Educational Change, School Restructuring, Parent Participation, Parent School Relationship
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Syeed, Esa; Noguera, Pedro – Journal of Social Science Education, 2014
In this article we explore recent history to uncover the role that public engagement has played in the effort to reform America's urban schools. In the place of narratives that focus on elite actors (foundations, unions, corporations, etc.), we focus on the role of local stakeholders. Specifically, we look to how the changing political context…
Descriptors: Urban Education, Educational Change, Educational History, Case Studies
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Nieto, Sonia – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2013
This article focuses on the intersections among language, literacy, and culture, and what these intersections have meant for the author personally, and what they can mean for students who have been marginalized, neglected, or made invisible by traditional understandings of the role of education. Although not linked conceptually in the past, the…
Descriptors: Puerto Ricans, Immigrants, Language, Literacy
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Cortez, Gabriel Alejandro – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2013
This case study investigates globalization and its growing impact on public school services to disenfranchised urban communities. Using a combination of periodicals, internal documents, and observations from the author, the research provides a narrative analysis of relations between community leaders of a low-income, Mexican immigrant community…
Descriptors: Public Education, Case Studies, Global Approach, Social Justice
Bacon, David – Rethinking Schools, 2011
Parent trigger laws, according to their proponents, give parents power. Gregory McGinity, managing director of policy for the Broad Education Foundation, calls them "a way for parents' voices to be heard." Sounds good. But is the parent trigger concept a way to put parents in charge of their kids' education, or is it part of a political agenda…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Parent Grievances, Parent School Relationship, Grievance Procedures
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Ong-Dean, Colin; Daly, Alan J.; Park, Vicki – Policy Futures in Education, 2011
Since the establishment of educational rights for children with disabilities in the 1970s, special education in the US has included a growing share of students and has constituted an ever-growing share of education budgets. Previous research has focused on the disproportionate assignment to special education of low-income and minority students,…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Hearings, Parent Participation, Disabilities
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