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James-Gallaway, Chaddrick D. – Teachers College Record, 2022
Background/Context: In New Orleans, Louisiana, in the years following Hurricane Katrina, predominantly white education reformers have used entrepreneurial support to dismantle the predominantly Black city's public education system. Using racial domination without community approval, these education reformers have educationally disenfranchised the…
Descriptors: Blacks, African American Teachers, Charter Schools, Critical Race Theory
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Williams, Kathleen; Hebert, Dustin – AASA Journal of Scholarship & Practice, 2017
Louisiana's relatively new Compass teacher observation and evaluation system is used to evaluate teacher quality or effectiveness in P-12 public schools. Secondary school administrators in one district were interviewed about their perceptions of the system and, especially, an iteration of the Danielson rubric used for teacher evaluation. Findings…
Descriptors: Secondary Education, Administrator Attitudes, Teacher Evaluation, Program Effectiveness
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Henry, Kevin Lawrence, Jr.; Dixson, Adrienne D. – Educational Policy, 2016
Charter schools have become the hegemonic "solution" for urban educational reform initiatives aimed at curtailing longstanding race-based educational inequities. The "common sense" of neoliberal charter schools as the cure to persistent inequality is best illustrated in the post-Katrina New Orleans educational reforms. This…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Urban Schools, Educational Change, African Americans
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Segall, Avner; Garrett, James – Teaching Education, 2013
In light of the increasing racial diversity in American schools and the consistently homogenous teacher workforce in the United States, understanding the ways white teachers consider and attend to racial issues is of crucial importance to the educational landscape. This paper, based on a qualitative study, explores five white American teachers'…
Descriptors: Whites, Racial Attitudes, Personal Narratives, Discourse Analysis
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Rosenfeld, Malke; Mahoney, Meg Robson; Jordan, Kim; Jackson, Spoon; Gabel, Bonnie; Adams, Holly; Plemons, Anna – Teaching Artist Journal, 2014
It is definitely easier to write about work when things are going well, but it is even more important to write about what happens when things get challenging. The act of writing about the challenging times can be challenging in itself but can also provide invaluable insights into the process of teaching: important for the writer and just as…
Descriptors: Art Education, Writing (Composition), Personal Narratives, Art Teachers
Johnson, Alan – Exceptional Parent, 2010
The First Congregational Church has a heart of mission. Yet, when the mission hits a situation that's personal and makes one squirm a bit, it becomes more of a challenge. Seven teams have been sent from the church to help the rebuilding in New Orleans. The first teams did the mucking, getting all of the belongings out of the house and putting them…
Descriptors: Altruism, Churches, Natural Disasters, Autism
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High School Journal, 2010
Before Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans on August 29, 2005, one hundred and twenty one schools in the New Orleans Public Schools (NOPS) system were in the process of being transferred to the newly created, state run Recovery School District (RSD). On September 29, 2005, the New Orleans Parish School Board fired all 7500 employees, including every…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Story Telling, Teacher Attitudes, Teaching Methods
Viadero, Debra – Education Week, 2006
Classmates at Reservoir High School sometimes call Dalyn Jones and Anthea Fields the "Katrina chicks." Left homeless by the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina, both teenagers migrated from the New Orleans area to Maryland in September of 2006. They met for the first time here when they showed up on the same day to register for 9th…
Descriptors: High School Students, Refugees, Personal Narratives, Natural Disasters
Viadero, Debra – Education Week, 2006
Nearly four months after Hurricane Katrina laid waste to their hometown, Jonathan and Shelley Midura are packing up the family's van and heading back from this Washington suburb to New Orleans. They just have to figure out where their three children will go to school. In this article the family shares their thoughts and feelings on changing…
Descriptors: Family (Sociological Unit), Refugees, Personal Narratives, Student Adjustment
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Lowery, Ellen; Burts, Diane C. – Journal of Early Childhood Teacher Education, 2007
This article describes the independent reading and research project of an early childhood education graduate student who taught in a school district heavily impacted by Hurricane Katrina. She surveyed a sample of kindergarten teachers in the district to determine how they were responding in the aftermath of Katrina. The voices of teachers reflect…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Early Childhood Education, Kindergarten, Natural Disasters
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Frost, Joe L. – Childhood Education, 2007
In this article, the author observes how a combination of interrelated elements are currently changing the face of the civilizing traditions of the U.S. education and forming a new culture of childhood. These include: (1) the standardization of education; (2) the dissolution of traditional spontaneous play; and (3) the growing specter of poverty…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Academic Achievement, High Stakes Tests, Play
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Buras, Kristen L. – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2009
In cities across the United States, working-class communities of color find themselves struggling against inequities deepened by state disinvestment. Students at the Center--a writing initiative based in several public high schools in New Orleans over the last decade--has been a part of this struggle and embraces a pedagogy rooted in the voices,…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Charter Schools, School Choice, Educational Change
Hughes, Marvalene – Presidency, 2005
When the unfathomable happened to Dillard University and other cherished institutions on the Gulf Coast on August 29, 2005, an act of nature ripped more than 1 million people from their comfort zones and thrust them into the unknown. They still have not had time to fully assess their personal losses, so intent have they been on focusing on their…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Natural Disasters, Weather, College Presidents
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Ancelet, Barry Jean – International Journal of Oral History, 1983
To focus only on collecting traditional forms of folklore can mean missing important forms of oral history and literature. Stories from French Louisiana are used to illustrate the continuing tradition of oral literature in the region and the way in which oral history is altered for the listener's entertainment. (IS)
Descriptors: Folk Culture, Historiography, Interviews, Legends
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Greene, Nicole Pepinster – Multicultural Perspectives, 2005
This article examines students' narrative responses to reading professional literacy histories. Demonstrating the importance of narrative as a way of learning, it shows how elementary education majors of diverse backgrounds explore their relation with language in a traditional grammar class. Cajun, Creole, and African American students recover…
Descriptors: Education Majors, African American Students, Creoles, Elementary Education