school expectations
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2021 ◽  
pp. 004208592110250
Author(s):  
Sarah Thomas ◽  
Laurence Parker

The purpose of this research was to examine the disconnect between urban school expectations and actual lived realities of marginalized students. Taking into consideration the conversation surrounding the definitions of urban education, and the importance of school connectedness with youth, we chose to focus on the lives of five former high students navigating their education. Our qualitative study found that the students’ lives presented challenges to linear pathways to school success. Drawing from the student’s stories, recommendations are proposed to disrupt the deficit definition of urban education and educational leaders initiate critical school connections to students lived realities.


2020 ◽  
pp. 875687052094557
Author(s):  
Emily C. Bouck ◽  
Holly M. Long ◽  
M. Patty Costello

While research exists on parent expectations associated with post-school outcomes of youth with intellectual disability, limited research examines issues of parent—and youth—post-school expectations relative to issues of community, such as living in rural versus urban or suburban settings. Through a secondary analysis of the National Longitudinal Transition Study (NLTS) 2012, we examined parent and youth expectations regarding post-school outcomes for students with intellectual disability relative to school locale (i.e., rural, urban, and suburban) and severity of intellectual disability. Youth from rural schools reported high rates of positive post-school expectations with regard to independent living and being employed, and their rates relative to independent living exceeded parental expectations. However, across the different variables, school locale was only a factor in the binary or ordinal logistic regression analyses for two dependent variables: parental expectation for their child to support themselves financially and parental expectations of obtained level of education.


2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 433-445
Author(s):  
Casey Pennington ◽  
Karen Wohlwend ◽  
Summer J. Davis ◽  
Jill Allison Scott

Purpose This paper aims to examine tensions around play, performance and artmaking as becoming in the mix of expected and taken-for-granted discourses implicit in an after-school ceramics makerspace (Perry and Medina, 2011). The authors look closely at one adolescent girl’s embodied performance to see how it ruptures the scripts for compliant bodies in the after-school program. While these performances take place out-of-school and in an arts studio, the tensions and explorations also resonate with broader issues around student embodied, performative and becomings that run counter to normalized school expectations. Design/methodology/approach A contemporary approach to nexus analysis (Medina and Wohlwend, 2014; Wohlwend, 2021) unpacked two critical performative encounters (Medina and Perry, 2011) using concepts of historical bodies (Scollon and Scollon, 2004) informed by sociomaterial thing-power (Bennett, 2010). Findings Playing while painting pottery collides and converges with the tacitly desired and expected ways of embodying student in this after-school artspace. Emily’s outer-space alien persona ruptured expected discourses when her historical body and embodied performances threatened other children. While her embodied performances facilitated her becoming a fully present participant in the studio, she fractured the line between play and reality in violent ways. Originality/value As literacy researchers, the authors are in a moment of reckoning where student embodied performances and historical bodies can collide with all-too-real violent threats in daily lives and community locations. Situating these performances in the nexus of embodied literacies, unsanctioned play and thing-power can help educators respond to these moments as ruptures of tacit expectations for girlhoods in school-like spaces.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 616-632
Author(s):  
Jana Vietze ◽  
Maja K. Schachner ◽  
Linda Juang ◽  
Fons J.R. Vijver ◽  
Peter Noack

2019 ◽  
Vol 583 (8) ◽  
pp. 40-51
Author(s):  
Edyta Ćwikła

Descriptive assesme nt is an important element of school practice. The student’s image adopted by the teacher is very important when formulating a descriptive assessment. Unfortunately, the pattern that emerged during the analysis of the testimonials of students completing the third grade is the pattern of the student as “performer of activities”. Teachers realisticall y translate their expectations into the practice of descriptive assessment, so a good descriptive assessment should show the comprehensive development and progress of the child. During its formulation, a balance should be maintained between social, emotional and cognitive development. Unfortunately, the analysis of the certifi cates showed that evaluation of the achievements of nine-year old childern mainly boils down to cognitive development.


2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 127-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Andrew Garbacz ◽  
Kent McIntosh ◽  
Christopher H. Vatland ◽  
Devon R. Minch ◽  
John W. Eagle

The purpose of this study was to identify and examine how schools implementing schoolwide positive behavioral interventions and supports (PBIS) were engaging families in their Tier I PBIS systems. In addition, reported implementation of practices and the availability of resources were examined in relation to fidelity of PBIS implementation. Participants included PBIS Leadership team representatives from 302 schools across three states. Findings revealed the most common ways in which schools (a) communicated with families about their PBIS systems, (b) worked with families to support PBIS at school, (c) supported family use of PBIS at home, and (d) built partnerships to support PBIS. Finally, communicating with families about PBIS and supporting families to help their child follow school expectations were related to fidelity of PBIS implementation. Implications and future research directions are discussed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 238212051772550 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachel MA Brown ◽  
Joe F Donaldson ◽  
Melissa D Warne-Griggs ◽  
Stephanie Bagby Stone ◽  
James D Campbell ◽  
...  

Little is known about the experiences that influence entering medical students’ internal concepts of themselves as future physicians. During orientation to medical school, students were asked to write stories in response to the cue, “Tell a story about a person or experience that inspired you to consider a career of service in medicine.” Qualitative methodology was employed to analyze 190 student stories. Thematic analysis identified descriptive details about content and allowed comparison between the students’ and School’s expectations. Inspirational settings, contexts, and individuals were identified. Nine different inspirational events were described. Student and School expectations for the kinds of physicians they hoped to become were generally consistent. The study demonstrates that students do indeed bring to medical school visions of the kinds of physicians they hope to become. Linking that vision with medical school activities including the White Coat Ceremony provides a bridge between medical school and students’ earlier lives, thus explicitly linking orientation to professional formation.


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