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Hornbeck, Dustin; Malin, Joel R.; Duncheon, Julia C.; Tan, Jing – NASSP Bulletin, 2023
Dual enrollment policies and programs, where students earn both high school and college credits, have been scaled up across the United States in the last two decades. In this mixed methods study, we survey high school principals in Ohio and Texas, two states with robust dual enrollment policies. The study addressed one broad research question:…
Descriptors: Principals, High Schools, Administrator Attitudes, Dual Enrollment
Pierce, Dennis – Community College Journal, 2023
As community colleges create or enhance their online learning programs, campus leaders must find ways to make these experiences equitable for all students, so that everyone has a fair chance at success. Colleges are using a wide array of innovative strategies to do this. These methods include designing online courses with inclusion in mind,…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Electronic Learning, School Orientation, Learning Management Systems
Sara Lawrence; Kathy Lease – Experiential Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
Real-world experience is often considered subordinate to academic learning at the doctoral level. Lessons from experiential learning at the doctoral level show higher education can be equity-minded and focused on the needs of learners without sacrificing depth and quality even at the highest levels of educational attainment. Doctoral faculty…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Doctoral Programs, Travel, Inquiry
Yi- Fan Li; Dalun Zhang; Heather M. Dulas; Mary L. Whirley – Journal of Postsecondary Student Success, 2024
Students with disabilities are an increasing subpopulation in higher education. Recently, research has put an emphasis on students' voices to explore their academic learning experiences, as well as the learning strategies they use to overcome learning barriers. This study aimed to investigate the academic learning experiences of students with…
Descriptors: College Students, Students with Disabilities, Accessibility (for Disabled), Equal Education
Mark E. Fincher – Higher Education Politics & Economics, 2024
Segregation is often seen in terms of race. However, it can also be based on socioeconomic status. Public colleges and universities in the U.S. had highly divergent responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite operating under similar health and legal considerations, campuses at most elite institutions were treated as essential functions while the…
Descriptors: Classroom Desegregation, Public Colleges, COVID-19, Pandemics
Perry A. Zirkel; Zorka Karanxha – Journal of Special Education Leadership, 2024
As the follow-up to an earlier examination of the frequency and outcomes trends of published court decisions under the IDEA for P-12 students, this updated analysis covers the 25-year period ending on December 31, 2022. The frequency trend for the most recent 10 years reversed the upward trajectory of the previous 15 years. The outcomes trend for…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Educational Trends, Special Education, Court Litigation
Templeton, Toni; White, Chaunté L.; Horn, Catherine L. – Journal of Higher Education, 2023
The purpose of this paper is to document the indirect effects of the Texas Top Ten Percent Plan on professional school degrees awarded and to propose the far reach of the law as an alternative argument in support of race-conscious admissions policies challenged under the strict scrutiny standard. Designed around the two tests of strict scrutiny,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Admission, Admission Criteria, Affirmative Action
Cole, Brian E.; Butcher, Jennifer T. – Christian Higher Education, 2023
With the growth of online higher education and the increasing diversification of college and university students, there is a need to focus on addressing the inequities of online learning and responding to the needs of diverse students. Students experience greater challenges in academic performance and in persisting and completing online programs,…
Descriptors: Student Needs, Diversity, Christianity, Electronic Learning
Jennifer Grace; Felix Simieou III; Renée E. Lastrapes; John Decman – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2024
Using a Critical Race framework, researchers conducted semi-structured interviews to explore how educational leaders across Texas have made meaning of the impact of George Floyd on their practices. Findings from this study add to the literature by examining administrators' reflections on race, racism, and their impact on their approaches to…
Descriptors: Racism, Leadership, Administrator Attitudes, Racial Attitudes
Philis M. Barragán Goetz; Rubén Donato; David G. García; Gonzalo Guzmán; Jarrod Hanson; Maribel Santiago – Teachers College Record, 2023
Mexican American educational history has become a vibrant field of study since the late 1980s. In the last seven years, however, it is notable that this research has inspired community-based efforts to preserve and publicly commemorate challenges to unequal education. In this commentary, we discuss the archival recovery of the "Francisco…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Educational History, Equal Education, Court Litigation
Jennifer Grace – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
This research explores how educational leaders in Texas navigate issues of anti-Black racism. In this Grounded Theory study, 19 participants engaged in a 90-min interview. They offer firsthand accounts of their experiences in navigating issues of anti-Black racism as well as strategies that they perceive to be necessary in interrogating and…
Descriptors: Leadership, Racism, African Americans, Discussion
Williams, John A.; James, Marlon; Beltrán, Ana Carolina Díaz; Young, Jemimah; Neshyba, Mónica Vásquez; Ogletree, Quinita – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2022
The urban education typology put forth by Milner (Urban Educ 47(3):556-561, 2012) offered a conceptual demarcation of three different, yet interconnected types of urban school districts (i.e., urban intensive, urban emergent, and urban characteristic). Nearly one decade after Milner's seminal urban education typology, few empirical or conceptual…
Descriptors: Urban Education, Classification, Urban Schools, School Districts
Bigelow, Alexis; Pineda, Mónica; McLean, Jimmy – Texas Education Review, 2022
Nearly 30 years ago, Critical Race Theory (CRT) was introduced to the field of education. Ladson-Billings and Tate argued that in order to understand educational inequities in the United States, it is essential to analyze the intersections of race and property. Throughout the past three decades, scholars within the field of education have utilized…
Descriptors: Critical Race Theory, Student Experience, Graduate Students, Equal Education
Shriberg, David; Nygaard, Malena A.; Carlock, Kane; Wood, Maureen; Brahm, Anna; Flores, Helena; Melfi, Elizabeth P. – School Psychology Review, 2023
Social justice is a term that has grown in prominence in school psychology over the past several years. This increased emphasis on social justice heightens the need for empirical research that speaks to the application of social justice principles to school psychology practice. In this study, nine school psychologists across three states were…
Descriptors: School Psychologists, Social Justice, Attitudes, Experience
Hernández, Susana H.; McKinney, Lyle; Burridge, Andrea; O'Brien, Catherine A. – New Directions for Community Colleges, 2023
The corequisite support model is a promising developmental education reform effort that is helping students transition into college-level coursework more quickly. The purpose of this chapter is to shed light on the critical leadership that has enhanced student success in corequisite courses and hold promise in enhancing equity within developmental…
Descriptors: Developmental Studies Programs, Community Colleges, Educational Change, Equal Education