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This book explores meaningful and effective use of student voice in
urban school renewal efforts through strategies that include:
surveys, interviews, focus groups, visual and video projects,
social media, and student participation in governance. Chapters
provide a definition of student voice, context for public schooling
in the United States, and introduce a framework for including
student voice in school renewal processes. Examples guide readers
to implementation of the framework to include student voices in
diverse educational settings. Authentic voices of approximately 175
students interviewed by the authors express what it is that they
really want from public schools and how pre K-12 educators can
provide a structure for ongoing student participation in governance
and the work of the school. The existing literature explores
student characteristics such as poverty, cultural diversity, and
what the experts believe students need public schools to provide.
Within the research, urban public schools and technical reform are
often explored and examined separately from conversations about
what students want from schools, excluding opportunities for their
voices and diverse perspectives to be heard. Listening to students
describe instances of bullying or teachers' low academic
expectations provides educators with opportunities to address
issues that impede student learning. The uniqueness of this
framework for including student voice is that it provides multiple
opportunities for students in any grade level to tell us what it is
they want from public schools, and to make meaningful and lasting
contributions to school renewal efforts.
Womanish Black Girls is a collection of essays written by varied
black women who fill spaces within the academy, public schools,
civic organizations, and religious institutions. These writings are
critically reflective and illuminate autobiographical
storied-lives. A major theme is the notion of womanish black
girls/women resisting the familial and communal expectations of
being seen, rather than heard. Consequently, these memories and
lived stories name contradictions between "being told what to do or
say" and "knowing and deciding for herself." Additional themes
include womanism and feminism, male patriarchy, violence, cultural
norms, positionality, spirituality, representation, survival, and
schooling. While the aforementioned can revive painful images and
feelings, the essays offer hope, joy, redemption, and the
re-imagining of new ways of being in individual and communal
spaces. An expectation is that middle school black girls, high
school black girls, college/university black girls, and community
black women view this work as seedlings for understanding
resistance, claiming voice, and healing.
This book explores meaningful and effective use of student voice in
urban school renewal efforts through strategies that include:
surveys, interviews, focus groups, visual and video projects,
social media, and student participation in governance. Chapters
provide a definition of student voice, context for public schooling
in the United States, and introduce a framework for including
student voice in school renewal processes. Examples guide readers
to implementation of the framework to include student voices in
diverse educational settings. Authentic voices of approximately 175
students interviewed by the authors express what it is that they
really want from public schools and how pre K-12 educators can
provide a structure for ongoing student participation in governance
and the work of the school. The existing literature explores
student characteristics such as poverty, cultural diversity, and
what the experts believe students need public schools to provide.
Within the research, urban public schools and technical reform are
often explored and examined separately from conversations about
what students want from schools, excluding opportunities for their
voices and diverse perspectives to be heard. Listening to students
describe instances of bullying or teachers' low academic
expectations provides educators with opportunities to address
issues that impede student learning. The uniqueness of this
framework for including student voice is that it provides multiple
opportunities for students in any grade level to tell us what it is
they want from public schools, and to make meaningful and lasting
contributions to school renewal efforts.
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Paperback
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R205
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