重塑家庭与学校的伙伴关系,打破黑人家庭权利被剥夺的局面,促进合作中的互惠互利

IF 3.8 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL
Bri'Anna Collins , S. Andrew Garbacz , Tunette Powell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究早已证明了家校合作的益处。然而,这些益处往往不能惠及所有家庭,尤其是黑人家庭。当前和历史上的歧视和排斥模式导致黑人家庭与学校的合作缺乏益处。一个主要因素是学校对家庭参与的定义过于狭隘。这种狭隘的定义往往将非主流背景的家庭,尤其是黑人家庭边缘化,并强化了黑人家长和家庭不参与子女教育的有害说法。持续的歧视和排斥以及有害的言论,对黑人家庭与学校的合作产生了影响。然而,学校可以努力弥补伤害,重建与黑人家庭的伙伴关系。在本文中,我们将提出一个开展此类工作的框架。在将这一框架的必要性建立在历史背景的基础上之后,我们强调了形成公平的黑人家庭-学校伙伴关系的三个基本要素:(a)将关系建设建立在社会正义的基础上,(b)将互惠融入家庭-学校关系中,以及(c)使用多种非主导性方法和模式来建立关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reframing family-school partnerships to disrupt disenfranchisement of Black families and promote reciprocity in collaboration

Research has long demonstrated the benefits of family-school partnerships. However, these benefits often fail to generalize to all families, especially Black families. A present and historical pattern of discrimination and exclusion has contributed to the lack of benefits yielded from Black family-school partnerships. A major contributing factor is the narrow way in which schools define family engagement. Such narrow definitions often marginalize families from non-dominant backgrounds, particularly Black families, and reinforce harmful narratives that Black parents and families are uninvolved in their children's education. The combination of continued discrimination and exclusion as well as harmful narratives has impacted Black family-school partnering. However, schools can work to repair harm and rebuild partnerships with Black families. In this article, we advance a framework for such work. After grounding the need for this framework in a historical context, we emphasize three essential components to forming equitable Black family-school partnerships: (a) grounding relationship building in social justice, (b) integrating reciprocity in family-school relationships, and (c) usage of multiple and non-dominant methods and modalities to build relationships.

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来源期刊
Journal of School Psychology
Journal of School Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, EDUCATIONAL-
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
8.00%
发文量
71
期刊介绍: The Journal of School Psychology publishes original empirical articles and critical reviews of the literature on research and practices relevant to psychological and behavioral processes in school settings. JSP presents research on intervention mechanisms and approaches; schooling effects on the development of social, cognitive, mental-health, and achievement-related outcomes; assessment; and consultation. Submissions from a variety of disciplines are encouraged. All manuscripts are read by the Editor and one or more editorial consultants with the intent of providing appropriate and constructive written reviews.
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