27 results on '"Lemke, Melinda"'
Search Results
2. A Feminist Critical Heuristic for Educational Policy Analysis: U.S. Social Emotional Learning Policy
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda and Rogers, Kate
- Abstract
Social emotional learning (SEL) aims to promote student well-being, including healthy relationships that are free from harm like gender-based-violence (GBV). We investigated U.S. SEL policy through the lens of GBV, and how policy in the New York State (NYS) context operates to actualize or constrain SEL aims. To do so, we developed and applied a novel feminist critical policy analysis (FCPA) heuristic. Key findings revealed that the NYS policy neglected to address GBV experienced by adolescent girls, and the overall absent presence of gender within the policy underscores concern for implementable SEL best practices. We conclude with implications for research, policy, and practice.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Examining Implicit Biases of Pre-Service Educators within a Professional Development Context
- Author
-
Breese, Amanda C., Nickerson, Amanda B., Lemke, Melinda, Mohr, Rebecca, Heidelburg, Kamontá, Fredrick, Stephanie, and Allen, Kathleen
- Abstract
The opportunity gap, or conditions and barriers that impede the academic performance and school experience of minoritized students, may be exacerbated by educators' implicit biases. The aim of this qualitative study was to understand preservice educators' awareness of individual, structural, and systemic racism with regard to implicit bias. Our sample included 154 preservice educators, enrolled in an anti-bullying/harassment/discrimination training, which is required for any New York State (NYS) educator certification. Educators responded to questions about group generalizations, factors contributing to these biases, and how biases may affect their behavior toward students. Our content analysis revealed several themes, most notably that frequent biases existed toward Asian/Asian Americans, Black/African Americans, males, and people from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds. Although participant responses reflect an open-minded approach to discussing bias, many responses reflected no observable desire to change potentially biased interactions with students. Responses with racially held biases aligned with the tenets of critical race theory (CRT), particularly racism as permanent and racism as normalized. Implications for practice, with an emphasis on anti-bias training and professional development, are discussed.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Seen yet Unseen: A Case of Human Trafficking at Harris High School
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda, Bascug, Erin, and Howard, Ahlea
- Abstract
Although anyone can become a victim, commercial exploitation and human trafficking disproportionately affect women, girls, and communities of color within the United States. Despite its prevalence, misinformation and a widespread lack of understanding on this issue create barriers to identifying and supporting trafficking victims. School staff are critically positioned to both identify and support the needs of trafficked youth. This article offers a fact-based case example of human trafficking in a small town in New York State, including one principal's challenges and opportunities in addressing human trafficking in her school. Programming and practice frameworks that utilize trauma-informed care, cultural and linguistic responsiveness, and human rights approaches are offered as strategies for engagement with this topic.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Glass Escalator in School Counselling: Gender and Leadership Aspirations
- Author
-
Holland Iantosca, Megan and Lemke, Melinda
- Abstract
High school counsellors serve as role models and mentors for students as they negotiate academic challenges, develop future career and educational plans, and explore their identities. Though research exists on the gendered experiences of high school administrators, there is a dearth of scholarship on school counsellors. To provide a framework for understanding gender dynamics within school counselling, we combined the feminist critical scholarship on K-12 educational leadership, with the sociological research on gendered experiences within women-dominated professions. Drawing upon in-depth interviews with 20 school counsellors, we examined the role of gender in leadership aspirations and experiences. We found that although women and men did not want to pursue leadership positions, men discussed internal and external pressure to take on leadership, while women received little encouragement. These findings confirm evidence of the glass escalator within the school counselling field and offer insights into the continued existence of traditional gender identity roles.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. (Un)doing Spatially Fixed Inequality: Critical Reflections on Urban School District-Community Partnerships
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda
- Abstract
Utilizing critical geography, critical history, and critical educational studies as guideposts, this article examines community organizing and school district partnerships as relevant to improving urban public education reform efforts and schooling practices within the United States. Proceeding in four parts, part one discusses the kinds of external multi-sector entities working with school districts in a continued era of accountability-driven educational reform. Understanding community activism as a lever to address urban geospatial obstacles to equity-oriented educational practices, this is followed by a historical overview of community-based organizations (CBOs) as tied to sociopolitical, economic, and schooling transformation throughout the U.S. Part three helps to illustrate this position through discussion of the Buffalo-Niagara Region and the case of one urban school district context--Buffalo Public Schools (BPS). Specifically, it considers how regional history, demographic shifts, urban development, racial spatialization, and CBOs affect district practices. It concludes with a discussion of the significance of CBO partnerships with urban schools toward the end of improving educational opportunities for traditionally underserved, low income, and minoritized student populations.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Co-Constructing Knowledge and Space with Refugee Communities: Lessons from the Western New York Refugee Health Summit.
- Author
-
Judelsohn, Alexandra, Lemke, Melinda, Hna, Ngo, Raja, Samina, Scates, Jessica, and Agbemenu, Kafuli
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH of refugees , *POWER (Social sciences) , *RESEARCH personnel , *REFUGEES , *EDUCATORS - Abstract
Displaced peoples are often excluded from institutional, community, and public processes in the United States, including in knowledge production spaces where researchers and educators may discuss problems and devise solutions. In this article, we explore the benefits and challenges inherent in the co-construction of knowledge spaces designed with the intent of serving refugee communities. To do so, we examined the Western New York Refugee Health Summit, an event held for eight years where actors convened from three spaces, i.e., institutional, community, and public. Findings are derived from the situated knowledge of the authors (actors embedded in the conception and execution of the Summit) and a qualitative descriptive analysis of eight Summit reports and event evaluation data. Findings illuminate how collaboration across these spaces is co-constructed, as well as challenges inherent in co-construction from an institutional perspective—including our attempts to contest institutional power dynamics. We conclude with a discussion of research and practice-based lessons for co-constructing spaces with and including the voices of refugee community partners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The Politics of 'Giving Student Victims a Voice': A Feminist Analysis of State Trafficking Policy Implementation
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda
- Abstract
Little research explores factors shaping those policies and actors involved in state-level sex and labor trafficking prevention. This study examined the organizational, political, and normative dynamics that influenced implementation of Texas House Bill 1272 (HB 1272, 2013), which included educators in trafficking prevention. Part of a larger study that used feminist critical policy analysis and multifocal theory as overarching guideposts, findings highlight important factors bound up with policy actor enactment and normative roadblocks to successful long-term curriculum and training implementation. This study fills a gap in the educational research literature both in its unpacking of the normative politics involved in eliminating youth commercial and sexual violence experienced and thick qualitative research findings, neither of which would be possible through one theoretical or methodological device. Implications of and recommendations for educational research and practice are offered.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Educators as the 'Frontline' of Human-Trafficking Prevention: An Analysis of State-Level Educational Policy
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda
- Abstract
Despite its significance as a policy issue, there is a paucity of knowledge about trafficking within educational policy and leadership research. The lack of research in this area and the contemporary spike in displaced youth populations necessitates examining those policies that aim to prevent trafficking through educational mediums. This study examined Texas House Bill 1272 (HB 1272, 2013), new state-level policy that brings educational leaders, teachers, and counselors into the fold of comprehensive prevention efforts. Trafficking dynamics, policies, and findings on the political and normative factors that shaped HB 1272 are presented. Recommendations for research and practice also are offered.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Global displacement and local contexts: a case study of U.S. urban educational policy and practice.
- Author
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Lemke, Melinda, Nickerson, Amanda, and Saboda, Jennifer
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION policy , *FORCED migration , *PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout , *SCHOLARSHIPS , *SOCIAL support - Abstract
A growing corpus of interdisciplinary scholarship focuses on migration, particularly the increasing intensity of forced migration, or displacement, and the sociocultural, political, and symbolic dimensions of global resettlement. Yet, there are limited empirical studies on how U.S. educators in urban contexts address these processes, including but not limited to displacement-based trauma and associated student needs. While educational scholarship has examined structural issues affecting increased educator burnout, a research paucity also exists regarding how educators experience relevant stress related to these dynamics. This article presents findings from a multi-method qualitative case study that examined how high school educators leveraged available educational policy and practice supports to address refugee and hurricane displaced student needs. Our research underscores multi-level system complexity that influences school-related resettlement processes, and specifically as relevant to supporting student mental health and mitigating educator stress. Utilizing a critical and social ecological theoretical approach, our findings offer a framework for anti-deficit, cultural and linguistically responsive, and trauma-informed student practices, who in rebuilding a new home in the U.S., can experience continued and new forms of marginalization. Implications for educational research and leadership practice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. (Un)doing Spatially Fixed Inequality: Critical Reflections on Urban School District-Community Partnerships
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Gender, Markets, and Inequality: A Framework
- Author
-
Jabbar, Huriya, Sun, Wei-Ling, Lemke, Melinda A., and Germain, Emily
- Abstract
A growing body of research examines the role of elite networks, power, and race in the advocacy for market-based reforms and their ultimate effects on students, teachers, and communities of color. Yet, less research explores how such reforms interact with gender in the workplace, especially how policies such as school choice, competition, and incentive-based pay impact female actors within K-12 schools (e.g., teachers, school leaders). The current research on marketization and privatization in education has largely overlooked the potential impact on women in schools. We review the literature on women in K-12 education and in the economy more generally, and organize it conceptually to identify areas for future inquiry. After synthesizing and summarizing themes across diverse bodies of literature, we contend that as schools privatize, we may see greater gender disparities in education leadership and teaching.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Successful Futures? New Economy Business Logics, Child Rights, and Welsh Educational Reform
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda and Zhu, Lei
- Abstract
The well-documented global economic disinvestment in schooling necessitates critical examination of policy discourses that influence educational systems and student learning. Situated within the critical policy studies tradition, the present study conducted a critical discourse analysis of the Donaldson Report (2015), a proposed comprehensive Welsh learning and accountability system. We begin with a brief discussion of research focused on global accountability reform within the new economy. To situate the Donaldson Report within this research, we review literature on reforms within the United Kingdom, with special attention to the Welsh educational policy context, which also includes incorporation of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) into national policy. Findings highlight a limited Report focus on core educational rights embodied within the UNCRC and recommendations for a new system that leans toward a more technocratic and performance orientation. We conclude with implications for the exercise of children's rights within Welsh schooling.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Trafficking and Immigration Policy: Intersections, Inconsistencies, and Implications for Public Education
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda
- Abstract
A growing body of interdisciplinary research examines the dynamics of, policies concerning, and implications of large-scale contemporary displacement in the United States. Yet less of this research explores the intersections of policies concerned with and normative understandings of displacement as both relate to U.S. schooling. This article discusses distinctive features of global displacement also highlighting concerns about student experience within the current political climate. It then synthesizes key U.S. policies and interdisciplinary literature that address aspects of displacement, including immigration, human trafficking, and asylum. In doing so, it illuminates how laws designed to protect vulnerable youth populations often conflict with the goals and normative politics of immigration enforcement. It concludes with implications for educational policy research and practice within U.S. schools serving high percentages of displaced populations.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Development and Validation of an Instrument to Assess Social Work Students' Perceptions, Knowledge, and Attitudes about Human Trafficking Questionnaire (PKA-HTQ): An Exploratory Study
- Author
-
Nsonwu, Maura Busch, Welch-Brewer, Chiquitia, Heffron, Laurie Cook, Lemke, Melinda A., Busch-Armendariz, Noel, Sulley, Caitlin, Cook, Sharon Warren, Lewis, Mary, Watson, Elizabeth, Moore, Wayne, and Li, Jilan
- Abstract
Objective: This study sought to develop and evaluate the psychometric properties of a tool designed to assess social work students' knowledge of and perceptions and attitudes toward human trafficking. To achieve this aim, the Perceptions, Knowledge, and Attitudes toward Human Trafficking Questionnaire (PKA-HTQ) was developed and its psychometric properties were evaluated. Specifically, the factor structure and the internal consistency of the PKA-HTQ were evaluated. Methods: Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and a replication EFA were conducted on two independent samples of university students, an initial validation (n ¼ 325), and cross-validation (n = 212) sample. Findings: The EFA revealed a three-factor structure, that is, self-appraisal of knowledge/skills (a = 0.89), worldview (a = 0.78), and help-seeking behavior (a = 0.66); this three-factor structure was supported by replication EFA. Conclusion: The PKA-HTQ questionnaire shows promise as a meaningful, potentially reliable and valid measure.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A feminist critical heuristic for educational policy analysis: U.S. social emotional learning policy.
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda and Rogers, Kate
- Subjects
- *
FEMINISTS , *SOCIAL emotional learning , *TEENAGE girls , *EDUCATION policy , *VIOLENCE - Abstract
Social emotional learning (SEL) aims to promote student well-being, including healthy relationships that are free from harm like gender-based-violence (GBV). We investigated U.S. SEL policy through the lens of GBV, and how policy in the New York State (NYS) context operates to actualize or constrain SEL aims. To do so, we developed and applied a novel feminist critical policy analysis (FCPA) heuristic. Key findings revealed that the NYS policy neglected to address GBV experienced by adolescent girls, and the overall absent presence of gender within the policy underscores concern for implementable SEL best practices. We conclude with implications for research, policy, and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The glass escalator in school counselling: gender and leadership aspirations.
- Author
-
Holland Iantosca, Megan and Lemke, Melinda
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL counseling , *EDUCATIONAL leadership , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *CAREER development , *HIGH school counselors , *SECONDARY education - Abstract
High school counsellors serve as role models and mentors for students as they negotiate academic challenges, develop future career and educational plans, and explore their identities. Though research exists on the gendered experiences of high school administrators, there is a dearth of scholarship on school counsellors. To provide a framework for understanding gender dynamics within school counselling, we combined the feminist critical scholarship on K-12 educational leadership, with the sociological research on gendered experiences within women-dominated professions. Drawing upon in-depth interviews with 20 school counsellors, we examined the role of gender in leadership aspirations and experiences. We found that although women and men did not want to pursue leadership positions, men discussed internal and external pressure to take on leadership, while women received little encouragement. These findings confirm evidence of the glass escalator within the school counselling field and offer insights into the continued existence of traditional gender identity roles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Seen Yet Unseen: A Case of Human Trafficking at Harris High School.
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda, Bascug, Erin, and Howard, Ahlea
- Subjects
HUMAN trafficking victims ,CULTURAL competence ,SCHOOL principals ,HIGH schools ,CRIME victims ,EXPLOITATION of humans ,TRAUMA-informed care - Abstract
Although anyone can become a victim, commercial exploitation and human trafficking disproportionately affect women, girls, and communities of color within the United States. Despite its prevalence, misinformation and a widespread lack of understanding on this issue create barriers to identifying and supporting trafficking victims. School staff are critically positioned to both identify and support the needs of trafficked youth. This article offers a fact-based case example of human trafficking in a small town in New York State, including one principal's challenges and opportunities in addressing human trafficking in her school. Programming and practice frameworks that utilize trauma-informed care, cultural and linguistic responsiveness, and human rights approaches are offered as strategies for engagement with this topic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Children displaced across borders: charting new directions for research from interdisciplinary perspectives.
- Author
-
Shubin, Sergei and Lemke, Melinda
- Subjects
- *
INTERDISCIPLINARY research , *GEOGRAPHIC boundaries , *IMMIGRANT children - Abstract
This paper introduces the special issue on Children Displaced Across Borders, tied to the outcomes of the conference held in Swansea in 2016. It explores discussions in migration research that attend to different meanings of the 'border' in relation to varied displacements of children. It starts with the discussion about the boundaries of migrant subjectivities and brings into question the ability of the child to manage and order displacements. It considers changing ethical and symbolic boundaries that are used to represent children and their movements, and challenges dominant dialectical oppositions used to define their belonging. It explores the linguistic and symbolic structures enabling children's displacements and disappearances. It concludes with the conceptual observations about different ways of engaging with the silences and limit-experiences in children's displacements often overlooked in contemporary migration research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Educating refugee and Hurricane displaced youth in troubled times: countering the politics of fear through culturally responsive and trauma-informed schooling.
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda and Nickerson, Amanda
- Subjects
- *
FORCED migration , *SCHOOL employees , *HURRICANES , *COGNITIVE development , *POLITICAL culture , *INVOLUNTARY relocation - Abstract
There is a growing body of interdisciplinary scholarship on the traumas inherent in forced migration and the corresponding educational and mental health needs of displaced youth. Yet, there is limited empirical research on how political and normative culture affects this relationship. This article presents findings from a larger multi-method qualitative case study that utilized observations, document collection, interviews, and focus groups to investigate how US high school personnel leveraged available policy and programmatic supports to address displaced student educational needs. Educator knowledge of student cultural histories coupled with awareness of how trauma can disrupt social and cognitive development was found to support anti-deficit thinking among staff and positive student transitioning into the US educational system within the current political environment. Building on literature concerned with the politics of education and ways to address structural oppression through culturally responsive and trauma-informed practices, this research develops a framework for understanding important intersections between schooling practices, context-specific resettlement culture, and student experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Educators as the "Frontline" of Human-Trafficking Prevention: An Analysis of State-Level Educational Policy.
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATIONAL leadership , *EDUCATORS , *TEACHING aids , *YOUTH - Abstract
Despite its significance as a policy issue, there is a paucity of knowledge about trafficking within educational policy and leadership research. The lack of research in this area and the contemporary spike in displaced youth populations necessitates examining those policies that aim to prevent trafficking through educational mediums. This study examined Texas House Bill 1272 (HB 1272, 2013), new state-level policy that brings educational leaders, teachers, and counselors into the fold of comprehensive prevention efforts. Trafficking dynamics, policies, and findings on the political and normative factors that shaped HB 1272 are presented. Recommendations for research and practice also are offered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Politics of "Giving Student Victims a Voice": A Feminist Analysis of State Trafficking Policy Implementation.
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda
- Subjects
- *
CRIMES against students , *FEMINISTS , *HUMAN trafficking , *EDUCATION research , *REQUIRED courses (Education) - Abstract
Little research explores factors shaping those policies and actors involved in state-level sex and labor trafficking prevention. This study examined the organizational, political, and normative dynamics that influenced implementation of Texas House Bill 1272 (HB 1272, 2013), which included educators in trafficking prevention. Part of a larger study that used feminist critical policy analysis and multifocal theory as overarching guideposts, findings highlight important factors bound up with policy actor enactment and normative roadblocks to successful long-term curriculum and training implementation. This study fills a gap in the educational research literature both in its unpacking of the normative politics involved in eliminating youth commercial and sexual violence experienced and thick qualitative research findings, neither of which would be possible through one theoretical or methodological device. Implications of and recommendations for educational research and practice are offered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Gender, Markets, and Inequality: A Framework.
- Author
-
Jabbar, Huriya, Sun, Wei-Ling, Lemke, Melinda A., and Germain, Emily
- Subjects
EDUCATION policy ,FEMINISM ,NEOLIBERALISM ,EDUCATIONAL leadership ,GENDER inequality - Abstract
A growing body of research examines the role of elite networks, power, and race in the advocacy for market-based reforms and their ultimate effects on students, teachers, and communities of color. Yet, less research explores how such reforms interact with gender in the workplace, especially how policies such as school choice, competition, and incentive-based pay impact female actors within K-12 schools (e.g., teachers, school leaders). The current research on marketization and privatization in education has largely overlooked the potential impact on women in schools. We review the literature on women in K-12 education and in the economy more generally, and organize it conceptually to identify areas for future inquiry. After synthesizing and summarizing themes across diverse bodies of literature, we contend that as schools privatize, we may see greater gender disparities in education leadership and teaching. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Successful futures? New economy business logics, child rights, and Welsh educational reform.
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda and Zhu, Lei
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Trafficking and Immigration Policy: Intersections, Inconsistencies, and Implications for Public Education.
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN trafficking , *GOVERNMENT policy on political refugees , *DISPLACEMENT (Psychology) , *EDUCATION policy , *UNITED States education system , *GOVERNMENT policy ,UNITED States immigration policy - Abstract
A growing body of interdisciplinary research examines the dynamics of, policies concerning, and implications of large-scale contemporary displacement in the United States. Yet less of this research explores the intersections of policies concerned with and normative understandings of displacement as both relate to U.S. schooling. This article discusses distinctive features of global displacement also highlighting concerns about student experience within the current political climate. It then synthesizes key U.S. policies and interdisciplinary literature that address aspects of displacement, including immigration, human trafficking, and asylum. In doing so, it illuminates how laws designed to protect vulnerable youth populations often conflict with the goals and normative politics of immigration enforcement. It concludes with implications for educational policy research and practice within U.S. schools serving high percentages of displaced populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Development and Validation of an Instrument to Assess Social Work Students’ Perceptions, Knowledge, and Attitudes About Human Trafficking Questionnaire (PKA-HTQ).
- Author
-
Nsonwu, Maura Busch, Welch-Brewer, Chiquitia, Heffron, Laurie Cook, Lemke, Melinda A., Busch-Armendariz, Noel, Sulley, Caitlin, Cook, Sharon Warren, Lewis, Mary, Watson, Elizabeth, Moore, Wayne, and Li, Jilan
- Subjects
CHI-squared test ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,FACTOR analysis ,HEALTH occupations students ,RESEARCH methodology ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SOCIAL workers ,STUDENTS ,STUDENT attitudes ,HUMAN trafficking ,CROSS-sectional method ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Objective: This study sought to develop and evaluate the psychometric properties of a tool designed to assess social work students’ knowledge of and perceptions and attitudes toward human trafficking. To achieve this aim, the Perceptions, Knowledge, and Attitudes toward Human Trafficking Questionnaire (PKA-HTQ) was developed and its psychometric properties were evaluated. Specifically, the factor structure and the internal consistency of the PKA-HTQ were evaluated. Methods: Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and a replication EFA were conducted on two independent samples of university students, an initial validation (n = 325), and cross-validation (n = 212) sample. Findings: The EFA revealed a three-factor structure, that is, self-appraisal of knowledge/skills (α = .89), worldview (α =.78), and help-seeking behavior (α =.66); this three-factor structure was supported by replication EFA. Conclusion: The PKA-HTQ questionnaire shows promise as a meaningful, potentially reliable and valid measure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. When Sexting Crosses the Line: Educator Responsibilities in the Support of Prosocial Adolescent Behavior and the Prevention of Violence.
- Author
-
Lemke, Melinda and Rogers, Katelyn
- Subjects
- *
SEXTING , *PROSOCIAL behavior , *TEENAGER attitudes , *EDUCATION policy , *SEX education - Abstract
This article presents findings from a systematic literature review that examined various forms of adolescent sexting, and as relevant to educator responsibilities in the support of prosocial behavior and teen dating violence (TDV) prevention within the United States. Proceeding in three parts, part one documents study methodology and offers an overview of adolescent sexting. This section also discusses tensions between sexting as adolescent empowerment and as a form of dating violence. This is followed by a deeper examination of how adolescent sexting is connected to other forms of sexual violence documented to disproportionately affect heterosexual females. Though laws on sexting are minimal, part three discusses U.S. federal and Supreme Court guidance having particular significance for this issue. This section also presents the case of New York State (NYS) to consider the connection between localized policies and schooling practices. Concerned with sexting as a form of consensual adolescent behavior, this article concludes with considerations for educational research, policy, and practice. This article contributes to established research literature weighing the prosocial aspects of sexting against those factors that contribute to and make it difficult to leave a violent relationship. Though empirical research was limited, it also highlights existent research on sexting as relevant to underserved and marginalized adolescent subgroups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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