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Urban Teacher Education
part of the Education Reform Network
Urban Teacher Education logo

Advocacy and Equity

  • A Cross-National Study of Teachers' Attributional Patterns
    This cross-national study examined patterns in teachers attributional responses to outcomes of students with and without learning disabilities. Teachers from elementary schools in California and Guatemala City participated in the study.
  • A Legacy Deferred
    Martin Luther King High School and the city schools that serve poor, minority kids need the government on all levels to commit resources for community development, so that schools aren't coping with social crises created by economic conditions beyond their reach.
  • Digital Equity Tool Kit
    The Digil Equity Toolkit points educators to free, high quality resources that help address the digital divide in the classroom and community.
  • Dis-Integrating American
    Racially integrated public schools have not become embedded in the foundation of American public policy. Nor do powerful claimant groups protect integrated schools.
  • Educating Urban Minority Youth
    A review of the research on promising practices for educating inner-city minority youth.
  • Educational Demographics: What Teachers Should Know
    The purpose of this article is to explore the key demographics affecting educational policy and how teachers can make us of demographics in their daily practice.
  • Georgetown - Office of Curriculum and Pedagogy (OCP), within the Center for Social Justice
    Within the Center for Social Justice, the Office of Curriculum and Pedagogy assumes three major responsibilities. (1) To promote, expand, and integrate community-based intellectual work within the curriculum.
  • Hate Hurts: How children Learn and Unlearn Prejudice
    Links to classroom materials and information on the Anti-Defammation League's work.
  • Implementing an Anti-Bias Curriculum in Early Childhood Classrooms. ERIC Digest
    Abstract: An antibias curriculum seeks to nurture children's potential by addressing issues of diversity and equity in the classroom. Goals of antibias curricula are to foster children's self-identity, interaction with people from diverse backgrounds, critical thinking about bias, and ability to stand up for themselves in the face of bias.
  • Making the Grade in High School: Success for African-American Urban Males
    Prince George's County Public Schools in Maryland, profiles an ancillary program which address the needs of underachieving freshman males.
  • Mediating Boundaries of Race, Class and Professional Authority as a Critical Multiculturalist
    This article presents one professor's reflections on the challenges of mediating the boundaries of race, class and professional authority in an undergraduate multicultural education course (abstract from article).You must register (free) on the site to review the article.
  • New Trends in language Education For Hispanic Students
    This digest summarizes the effective bilingual strategies described in Transforming Education and HDP's recommendations for bilingual education at all school levels. While the strategies are specifically oriented to the needs of Hispanic students, most can improve the education of all students with immigrant and limited English speaking backgrounds.
  • Nonprofit Leadership and Democracy Curriculum: A Guide for Strategic Analysis, Participatory Research, Civic Action, and Effective Advocacy
    The Nonprofit Leadership and Democracy Project has developed an innovative educational and training curriculum to help equip current and future nonprofit leaders to meet the complex challenges facing the nonprofit sector.
  • Other People's Children: Cultural Conflict in the Classroom
    This collection of nine essays suggests that many academic problems attributed to children of color actually stem from a power structure in which the worldviews of those with privelege are taken as the only reality, while the worldviews and culture of those less powerful are dismissed as inconsequential or deficient.
  • Poverty Around the World
    This program will help us to explore some of the issues that people living in poverty face. Exploring the issues of poverty can help us to find solutions.
  • Preparing Teachers for Urban Settings: Changing Teacher Education by Changing Ourselves
    This article describes the personal and professional changes experienced by a teacher education faculty who embarked on a joint project relating to urban education. The faculty members committed to write book chapters applying their areas of expertise to the challenge of preparing teachers for urban schools.
  • Preventing and Countering School-Based Harassment
    Preventing and Countering School-Based Harassment is the result of two conferences on racial harassment and numerous training of trainer administrator workshops. This guide addresses the more comprehensive issue of school-based harassment by capturing similarities in cause of, type of, and remedy for all forms of harassment.
  • Professional Development Schools Project
    A collaboration between Temple University and the School District of Philadelphia to improve education in the city on all levels. In the Professional Development Schools (PDS) Project, educators work collaboratively to provide the clinical settings necessary for new models of training preservice teachers and counselors, to provide life-long learning for seasoned teachers and faculty, to offer enrichment activities for students in grades K-12, and to provide avenues for involving community members in the education process.
  • Programs for English Language Learners
    Materials and a reference tool to assist school districts through the process of developing a comprehensive English language proficiency or English language learners program. The materials discuss helpful steps to follow in designing or revising a program.
  • Project Site Support
    Since 1999, Project SITE SUPPORT (PSS) has made unmatched contributions to the Baltimore City Public School System by providing hundreds of highly qualified teachers who have been specially trained to meet the diverse learning needs of students in this challenging urban environment.
  • Rights, rights, human rights.
    Rights, rights, human rights. The word gets around.
  • Social Relationships and Peer Support: Teachers' Guides to Inclusive Practices
    Facilitating positive peer relationships and supportive ties between students is essential to creating a successful inclusive classroom. This user-friendly guide for teachers offers proven models on how to build these important relationships.
  • The Center for Urban Education
    The Center for Urban Education (CUE) is a research and action center whose mission is to conduct research that will result in the creation of enabling institutional environments for children, youth, and adults from socially and economically disenfranchised groups residing in urban settings.
  • The NEA Foundation
    Created by the National Education Association, The NEA Foundation empowers public education employees to innovate, take risks, and become agents for change to improve teaching and learning in our society.
  • The Pedagogy of Poverty Versus Good Teaching
    This is an excellent article by Martin Haberman analyzing the status quo of urban pedagogy and pushing teachers to think about ways to break out of this and re-engage their students.
  • The Souls of Black Folk
    First published in 1903, this extraordinary work not only recorded and explained history, it helped to alter its course. Written after Du Bois had earned a Ph.D.
  • The United Nations Cyberschoolbus
    The United Nations Cyberschoolbus was created in 1996 as the online education component of the Global Teaching and Learning Project, whose mission is to promote education about international issues and the United Nations. The Global Teaching and Learning Project produces high quality teaching materials and activities designed for educational use (at primary, intermediate and secondary school levels) and for training teachers.
  • The Urban Impact Project - Curriculum Redesign
    The Urban Impact Project's first goal is to restructure university coursework and university/school partnerships to better equip preservice teachers with the necessary knowledge, skills, and abilities to succeed with urban student populations, utilizing technology enhancements where appropriate. The Curriculum Redesign teams strive to reach this goal in three areas: science, reading, and math education.
  • Transforming Education for Hispanic Youth: Exemplary Practices, Programs,and Schools
    A report on the Hispanic Dropout Project, a two-year study commissioned by the U.S. Department of Education.
  • Who is prepared to teach in urban schools?
    The article examines the hypothesis that alternative routes to teacher certification are more likely than traditional routes to recruit successful urban school teachers. Beliefs and practices of 45 secondary English and mathematics novice teachers from bo th routes were studied.
  • Why Urban Parents Resist Involvement in their Children's Elementary Education
    Reseachers examined the perceptions of teachers and parents about family involvement in urban schools. The study generated from several others that have been conducted about teaching in high poverty, urban schools.