7 results on '"KIRSHNER, BEN"'
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2. Advocating for Students During Distance Learning: The Role of the School Counselor.
- Author
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Hipolito-Delgado, Carlos P., Porras, Laura-Elena, Stickney, Dane, and Kirshner, Ben
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DISTANCE education students ,STUDENT counselors ,COVID-19 pandemic ,DISTANCE education ,SCHOOL districts - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic forced schools to rush into distance learning, prioritizing academics and limiting consideration of students' socioemotional needs. Given that distance learning is likely to be a recurring experience, school counselors should understand this unique context to better advocate for student needs. Through this illustrative case study, we sought to understand the distance learning experience of students, specifically examining barriers experienced and desired support, in an urban school district in the Western United States. We conducted classroom observations, interviews, and town hall observation with students who were part of an action civics program in the district. Following thematic data analysis, we found that student participants described themes of challenges (with subthemes of online learning and outside of school), needs (with subthemes of community and student voice), and communication. Based on these findings, we argue for school counselors to use student voice to inform advocacy efforts in addressing student needs during distance learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. How Positioning Shapes Opportunities for Student Agency in Schools.
- Author
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YORK, ADAM and KIRSHNER, BEN
- Subjects
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YOUTH in politics , *SERVICE learning , *SOCIAL justice , *SOCIAL justice education , *CIVICS education , *COMMUNITY-based participatory research - Abstract
This chapter shows how student positioning by adults shapes opportunities for students to develop collective systemic agency. Collective systemic agency refers to the capacity to organize others, participate in discussions, develop a systemic analysis, and take action in complex institutions, such as schools. This repertoire can be cultivated by encouraging students to ask critical questions about their educational experiences and to uncover evidence about how policy affects people. In observing this process taking place in schools, we notice that the ways adults positioned students, in part through talk, greatly impacted learning opportunities. To warrant our claims, we draw on data from Critical Civic Inquiry (CCI), a university-school partnership in which teachers guide students through an action research cycle. Our analysis looks at the ways in which school and classroom level positioning of students impacts student experiences and openings for action. Both focal classrooms make space for civic learning, but the chances to express agency are limited in some cases. We argue that these learning opportunities are strengthened when education professionals look beyond curricular experiences and attend to how students are positioned through discourse in the broader context of the school. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Participatory Democracy and Struggling Schools: Making Space for Youth in School Turnarounds.
- Author
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KIRSHNER, BEN and JEFFERSON, ANTWAN
- Subjects
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PARTICIPATORY democracy , *EDUCATIONAL change , *YOUTH , *RACE to the Top (Education) , *INTERVENTION (Federal government) , *UNITED States education system , *EDUCATION policy , *DEMOCRACY & education , *YOUTHS' attitudes , *EDUCATIONAL finance ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Background/Context: Federal policy, as codified in Race to the Top (RTT) funding guidelines, outlines four types of intervention: turnaround, restart, closure, and transformation. RTT has embraced a technocratic paradigm for school reform that frames choice less as the opportunity for the public to deliberate about what it wants from its schools and more in terms of the freedom of individual families to choose, as customers, from a diverse array of school options. This market-based system has eroded substantive opportunities for parents and students to participate in decisions about their schools. Although scholars have developed compelling arguments about the need to involve parents and teachers in a mare deliberative and democratic approach to intervening in low-performing schools, there is little scholarship focused on the role of young people in school intervention processes. Purpose: There is widespread agreement among progressive critics that RTT interventions are not sufficiently democratic. More work is needed to develop participatory approaches. In some cases this may require departing from a strict "evidence-based" framework and imagining new alternatives consistent with values of social justice and educational equity. It also requires expanding existing treatments of deliberative democracy theory to include young people. Research Design & Findings: This article makes a conceptual argument rooted in theory, empirical literature, and practical experience in schools. After explaining theories of participatory democracy, youth-adult partnerships, and thirdspace, we propose five practices that should guide a deliberative, participatory approach to public decision-making about schools. These are: border-crossing facilitation, participatory research, multilingual and multicultural discourse practices, authentic decision-making, and joint work and distributed expertise. Conclusions/Recommendations: The current school turnaround paradigm, embodied by closures, conversion to charters, and teacher reassignments, has left a great deal of collateral damage in its wake. Teachers work under threat of firing. We propose an alternative approach to improve struggling public neighborhood schools-- not just another option in a menu of turnaround strategies, but an alternative frame and set of practices that expands the conversation about intervention. This approach encourages deliberation and communication among diverse networks of students, teachers, and families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Youth Participation in U.S. Contexts: Student Voice Without a National Mandate.
- Author
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Mitra, Dana, Serriere, Stephanie, and Kirshner, Ben
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LEADERSHIP in adolescence ,HUMAN rights ,ACTION research ,CITIZENSHIP ,DECISION making ,SCHOOL environment ,SCHOOLS ,SOCIAL change ,STUDENT attitudes ,SOCIAL media - Abstract
Unlike the United Kingdom and other nations that mandate youth participation to some degree, U.S. policies instead tend to inhibit child participation rather than encourage it. Given these policy contexts, it can be challenging to locate spaces where robust opportunities for democratic participation and student voice exist. We use this article as an opportunity to examine the disciplinary, philosophical and methodological approaches that have framed youth participation in youth contexts. We conclude by identifying critical issues of citizenship and belonging that must be considered in participatory research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Student Interpretations of a School Closure: Implications for Student Voice in Equity-Based School Reform.
- Author
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KIRSHNER, BEN and POZZOBONI, KRISTEN M.
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SCHOOL closings , *EDUCATIONAL evaluation , *EDUCATION & demography , *MINORITY students , *EDUCATIONAL change , *URBAN schools - Abstract
Background/Context: School closure is becoming an increasingly common policy response to underperforming urban schools. Districts typically justify closure decisions by pointing to schools' low performance on measures required by No Child Left Behind. Closures disproportionately fall on schools with high percentages of poor and working-class students of color. Few studies have examined how students interpret or respond to school closures. Purpose: Our purpose was to document narratives articulated by students about the closure of their high school. Doing so is important because students, particularly students of color from low-income families, are often left out of policy decisions that affect their lives. Population/Participants: Research participants were recruited from the population of youth who had attended the closed school and who remained in the district during the subsequent year. Twenty-three percent of students at the school were African American, 75 % were Latino, and 2 % were White. Over 90 % of students were eligible for free and reduced lunch. A total of 106 students responded to surveys and peer interviews, and 12 youth who had dropped out of school participated in focus groups. Research Design: This was a youth participatory action research (YPAR) study, designed collaboratively by former Jefferson students, university researchers, and adult community members. Data sources included open-ended surveys, peer interviews, focus groups, and field notes describing public events and YPAR meetings. Findings: Our data show that most respondents did not agree with the decision to close their school. Student disagreement surfaced two counternarratives. First, students critiqued the way the decision was made--they felt excluded from the decision-making process that led to closure. Second, they critiqued the rationale for the decision, which suggested that students needed to be rescued from a failing school. Students articulated features of Jefferson that they valued, such as trusting relationships with adults, connection to place, and sense of belonging, which they felt were discounted by the decision. Conclusions/Recommendations: Evidence from this study lends support to developmental and political justifications for robust youth participation in equity-based school reform. By developmental justification, we mean evidence that young people were ready to participate, which counters discourses about youth as immature or unprepared. By political justification, we mean evidence that youth articulated interests that were discounted in the decision-making process and that challenged normative assumptions about school quality. In our conclusion, we point to examples of expanded roles that students could play in decision-making processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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7. Supporting Youth Participation in School Reform: Preliminary Notes from a University-Community Partnership.
- Author
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Kirshner, Ben
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YOUTH ,SCHOOL involvement ,PARTNERSHIPS in education ,COMMUNITY organization ,SOCIAL conditions of high school students ,EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
Youth voice and participation have become popular slogans in the United States. However, too often presentations by youth groups result in pleasant, but ultimately toothless, responses from policymakers. This paper describes the early stages of a partnership between a university researcher and a community organization that helps high school students learn tools that will enable them to participate, as legitimate political actors, in decisions about school reform. The report identifies the goals of the partnership, discusses steps taken so far, and shares some of the assumptions and strategies guiding the work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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