1st Edition

Active Learning Social Justice Education and Participatory Action Research

By Dana E. Wright Copyright 2015
    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    While many educators acknowledge the challenges of a curriculum shaped by test preparation, implementing meaningful new teaching strategies can be difficult. Active Learning presents an examination of innovative, interactive teaching strategies that were successful in engaging urban students who struggled with classroom learning. Drawing on rich ethnographic data, the book proposes participatory action research as a viable approach to teaching and learning that supports the development of multiple literacies in writing, reading, research and oral communication. As Wright argues, in connecting learning to authentic purposes and real world consequences, participatory action research can serve as a model for meaningful urban school reform.

    After an introduction to the history and demographics of the working-class West Coast neighborhood in which the described PAR project took place, the book discusses the "pedagogy of praxis" method and the project’s successful development of student voice, sociopolitical analysis capacities, leadership skills, empowerment and agency. Topics addressed include an analysis and discussion of the youth-driven PAR process, the reactions of student researchers, and the challenges for adults in maintaining youth and adult partnerships. A thought-provoking response to current educational challenges, Active Learning offers both timely implications for educational reform and recommendations to improve school policies and practices.

    Contents

    Foreword

    Chapter 1: Introduction

    Overview of the Central Youth United Participatory Action Research Project

    Researcher Location and Research Commitments

    Research Methods and the Study Context

    Overview of the Book

    Organization of the Book

    Chapter 2: Participatory Action Research (PAR) with Youth as Pedagogy

    Introduction

    What is Active Learning?

    The Youth Discourses: Systems of Reasoning that Frame Young People

    Adultism

    The Role of Asset-based Pedagogies in Building Sociopolitical Consciousness

    The Contexts of Schooling and Learning

    What is Participatory Action Research with Youth?

    PAR with Youth as a Teaching and Learning Approach

    PAR as a Pedagogical Approach in the Central Youth United Project

    Chapter 3: The Context of Central Youth United and Participant Profiles

    Introduction

    Profile of the Central Neighborhood

    Background of the Central Youth United Project

    Overview of the Central Youth United Project

    Central Youth United Student Researcher Profiles

    Jocelyn

    Rashna

    Alejandra

    Terrence

    Jason

    Miguel
    Eric

    Victor

    Chenda

    Ameera

    Profiles of Organizations Affiliated with the CYU Project

    Central Community Development Center (CCDC)

    Central Community Organizing Alliance

    Representing Ourselves

    Sister Space

    Central Youth Task Force

    Youth Voices

    Chapter 4: A Pedagogy of Praxis: Connecting Reflection and Action

    Introduction

    Participatory Action Research as a Structured Teaching Approach

    CYU’s Purpose and Goals and Motivations to Join the Project

    A Community Building Curriculum to Promote Collaborative Inquiry

    A Gradual Process to Bolster Marginalized Students’ Voice

    A Pedagogy that Supports Youth Participation and Active Learning

    Structured Activities to Elicit Youth Voice, Experiences and Perspectives

    Teaching Strategies to Guide and Build Knowledge Producers

    Conclusion: A Pedagogy of Praxis Approach

    Chapter 5: Situated Learning: Change Agents in a Meaningful Purpose

    Introduction

    Youth Input and Decision-making: Contributing Ideas and Experiences

    Relational Leadership: A Dialogical Process in Communities of Practice

    Group Accountability within Relational Leadership

    Inspiring Teamwork and Engagement in Others Through Relational Leadership

    Peer Mentorship as a Component of Relational Leadership Development

    Emergent Leadership Roles: Situated Learning

    A Sense of Ownership

    Adult Role in Increasing Project Ownership

    Developing Agency, Commitment and Accountability

    Features of Youth-led Work and Challenges

    Challenges in Supporting a Youth-led Process

    Conclusion: Situated Learning and Building Agency

    Situated Learning

    Connecting Ownership, Agency and Motivation through Communities of Practice

    Positive Youth Development and Participation

    Chapter 6: Promoting Sociopolitical Analysis Skills

    Introduction

    A Dialogic Approach that Taps Funds of Knowledge to Actively Construct Ideas

    Developing Sociopolitical Analysis Skills

    The Role of Vulnerability in Understanding Shared Challenges

    Conclusion: Sociopolitical Analysis Development

    Chapter 7: Empowering Youth as Experts and Knowledge Producers

    Introduction

    Successful Interventions by Instructors to Resolve Interpersonal Conflicts

    Increasing Voice and Empowerment to Build Agency

    Impact of the PAR Presentation and Next Steps

    Discussion

    Chapter 8: Tensions and Dilemmas in Sustaining Collaborative Work

    Introduction

    Catalyzing Events Impacting Group Dynamics

    The Importance of Reflective Space In Group Processes

    The Importance of Critical Care Approaches in Teaching Students of Color

    Tensions in Partnerships between Student Researchers and Instructors

    Impacts of Jason’s Disengagement on Group Dynamics

    Lessons Learned about Instructors’ Roles and Interventions

    Teaching Codes of Power to Navigate Environments

    Sacrificing the Whole for One: The Need for Boundaries

    The Construction of Four Context-Free "Bad Boys"

    Discussion

    Roles, Strategies and Approaches in Central Youth United

    Design Issue: An Unfit Match?

    Design and Planning Issue: A Lack of Support for Instructors

    Design Issue: Bridging Two Youth Organizations

    Design Issue: Connecting Macro- and Micro-level Violence

    Conclusion: Implications for Youth and Adult Partnerships

    Adults’ Support of Participatory Action Research Projects with Youth

    Chapter 9: Conclusion

    Summary of Key Points

    A Pedagogy of Praxis

    Significance of a Pedagogy of Praxis

    Sociopolitical Analysis Development

    Relational Leadership and Agency

    Youth and Adult Partnerships: Power With

    Dilemmas and Challenges the PAR Project Faced

    Transferability of Study Findings

    Recommendations for Teaching and Schools: PAR as Pedagogy

    Recommendations for Practice: Participatory Action Research

    Implications for Policy and Planning

    Implications for Future Research

    Discussion

    References

     

    Biography

    Dana E. Wright is an Assistant Professor of Education at Connecticut College.

    "In this important new book, Dana Wright addresses an issue of vital importance to American education: how to get students more engaged as learners. Drawing on research carried out in collaboration with schools, Wright shows us how learning experiences for students can be made more meaningful and result in higher levels of motivation when teachers connect the curriculum to the lives of their students and engage them in a process of mutual inquiry. For educators seeking to find ways to get their students excited about learning, Active Learning will be an invaluable resource." 

    --Pedro Noguera, Peter L. Agnew Professor of Education, NYU

     

    "This is the book on youth participatory action research we need! Dana Wright has given us a careful, detailed and comprehensive account of the processes through which action-oriented, critical pedagogy is being developed and practiced in communities across the country. While urban high school students often find themselves alienated from traditional curriculum, Wright shows us that another world is possible and provides concrete, practical strategies for teachers who want to create that world in their classrooms and communities."

    -- Mark R. Warren, Associate Professor of Public Policy and Public Affairs, University of Massachusetts Boston