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E-grāmata: Complex Web of Inequality in North American Schools: Investigating Educational Policies for Social Justice

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The Complex Web of Inequality in North American Schools analyzes and challenges the critical gaps and inequalities that persist in the American school system. Showing how historical biases have been inherited in current polices relating to non-dominant youth, the text calls for educational reforms that perform in the name of social justice.

This edited collection carefully interrogates how technocratic educational policies and reforms are often unequipped to address the interplay of political, social, economic, ideological factors that are at the roots of educational injustice. Considering the most vulnerable student populations, original case studies explore how inadequate structures, practices, and beliefs have increased marginalization, and highlight those instances in which policy has proved effective in reducing opportunity gaps between economically rich and poor students; between white, Asian, Black and Latino youth; between native English speakers and second language learners; highlighting racial integration and unequal American Indian education; and for students with special educational needs. The insights into such policies shed light on the complex web of historically embedded inequities that continue to shape the construction, roll-out, and consequences of education policy for the most marginalized youth populations today.

This volume will be of interest to graduate, and postgraduate students, researchers and academics in the fields of education policy, sociology of education, economics of education, and history of education, and well as policy evaluation.
List of Contributors
ix
1 Ambitious Imaginations and Education Policy: Swimming Upstream and Unsettling Neoliberal Enclosures
1(20)
Miguel N. Abad
Socorro Cambero
Briana M. Hinga
Gilberto Q. Conchas
Kris D. Gutierrez
PART I "False Choices"
21(76)
2 How Long Do We Have to Wait? Examining School Choice, Selective Enrollment Schools, and the Reproduction of Racial Inequality in a Southern Community
23(23)
Sophia Rodriguez
David Bonezzi
Kyra Koehler
3 Education for What and Whom? The Paradoxical Nature of an Upward Bound Program
46(16)
Kevin Clay
4 Turnaround, Mayoral Control, Minoritized Communities, and Dirty Water: School Reform in an Urban District in Connecticut
62(14)
James S. Wright
5 The Influence of School Turnaround Leadership: An American Indian School District Case Study
76(21)
Jameson D. Lopez
Evelyn C. Baca
PART II Technical Solutions for Justice Issues
97(74)
6 (Dis)Connected: Youth Peer Culture During a School Racial/Ethnic Integration Reform
99(22)
Ana Lilia Campos-Manzo
Grace Hall
Luis Enrique Ramos
Christina Ignatiadis
7 Unfinished Bridges Over the Digital Divide: Engagement and Equity in 1:1 Technology
121(18)
Stacy Gherardi
8 How the Free-Market Approach to Charter Schools Has Failed the Minoritized Students Who Were Intended to Benefit the Most
139(15)
Brittany Larkin
Carlee Escue Simon
9 When Achievement Gaps Are Acceptable: School-Level Data Practices and Subgroup Accountability Pressure in Economically and Racially Segregated Schools
154(17)
Rachel Garver
PART III The Legacy and Futures of Special Education
171(56)
10 The Individuals With Disabilities Education Act: The Further Marginalization of Racially and Ethnically Diverse Students for More Than 40 Years
173(16)
Jennifer M. Mckenzie
Ambra L. Green
11 Civil Rights Remedies and Persistent Inequities: The Case of Racial Disproportionality in Special Education
189(13)
Catherine Kramarczuk Voulgarides
12 "PAAP Season": A New Rationale for Segregating Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities
202(16)
Maria Timberlake
13 Theories From Below: Imagining Policy Making and Policy Analysis Beyond "Achievement" Paradigms
218(9)
Socorro Cambero
Miguel N. Abad
Briana M. Hinga
Gilberto Q. Conchas
Index 227
Gilberto Q. Conchas is Professor of Sociology of Education at the University of California, Irvine, USA.

Briana M. Hinga is Assistant Professor of Clinical Education at the University of Southern California, USA.

Miguel N. Abad is Doctoral Candidate in Educational Policy and Social Context at the University of California, Irvine, USA.

Kris D. Guiterrez is Professor of learning sciences, research methodology, policy, and literacy at the University of California, Berkeley, USA.