Seeking Direct Accountability for Disproportionate Discipline and Dis/ability Classification

IF 3.5 3区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Joshua Bornstein, Hilary Lustick, LaChan V. Hannon, Lauren Shallish, Nathern Okilwa
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Accountability for racially disproportionate discipline and dis/ability classification has conventionally spotlighted the disparate impact on students. Typically, findings such as “x% of African American students were suspended” or “y% of Latinx students were misidentified as having learning dis/abilities” reinforce this pattern. Our qualitative study sought the outlines of a different framing that locates accountability in practices, policies, and patterns of adult actors that produce those unjust outcomes. Practitioners, policy makers, researchers, and activists participated in this interview study by giving their perspectives on that reframing. Although their analyses fell short of directly holding the educational system accountable, they did highlight reforms such as increasing student agency in discipline and classification processes, expanding those processes to include a holistic analysis of students’ lives, and acknowledging that current accountability measures evade and obscure structural racism in discipline and dis/ability classification.
寻求对不相称的纪律和残疾/能力分类的直接问责
对种族不成比例的纪律和残疾/能力分类的问责通常会突出对学生的不同影响。通常,诸如“x%的非裔美国学生被停学”或“y%的拉丁裔学生被误认为有学习障碍/能力”之类的发现强化了这种模式。我们的定性研究寻求一种不同框架的轮廓,该框架将责任定位于产生这些不公正结果的成人行为者的实践、政策和模式。从业人员、政策制定者、研究人员和活动家参与了这次访谈研究,给出了他们对重构的看法。虽然他们的分析没有直接追究教育系统的责任,但他们确实强调了改革,如增加学生在纪律和分类过程中的代理,扩大这些过程,包括对学生生活的全面分析,并承认目前的问责措施逃避和模糊了纪律和残疾/能力分类中的结构性种族主义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Aera Open
Aera Open EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
7.10%
发文量
60
审稿时长
15 weeks
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