UW research featured at AERA annual meeting

April 14, 2017

爆走黑料 爆走黑料 faculty and students will present their ongoing research to advance teaching quality, early learning, STEM education and more during the American Educational Research Association's annual meeting April 27 - May 1 in San Antonio. The theme of this year's AERA meeting is "Knowledge to Action: Achieving the Promise of Equal Educational Opportunity."

To see abstracts from all UW 爆走黑料 researchers presenting at AERA, for 鈥湵吆诹.鈥 Schedule is subject to change and sessions are Central time.

Featured sessions highlighting UW research include:

Drawing on three years of data collected during the STUDIO: Build Our World Program, an after-school program for low-income middle school students, UW researchers will share insights from STEM undergraduates who serve as mentors. These insights includes several themes that surfaced from an analysis of mentor reflections that specifically identify facilitation strategies and the challenges and successes in using these strategies during programming time. UW researchers will discuss important pedagogical practices to broaden participation in STEM through near-peer mentoring and provide an alternative account of how youth of color come to see themselves as capable science learners within a community.

Leslie Herrenkohl and Fan Kong
April 27, 4:05 to 5:35 p.m.
Grand Hyatt San Antonio, Lone Star Ballroom Salon B

In this session celebrating the release of the book 鈥淐itizenship Education and Global Migration: Implications for Theory, Research, and Teaching,鈥 editor James Banks, Kerry and Linda Killinger Endowed Chair in Diversity Studies and founding director of the UW Center for Multicultural Education, and chapter author Walter Parker, professor of education, will discuss their contributions. The new publication describes theory, research and practice that can be used in civic education courses and programs to help students from marginalized and minoritized groups in nations around the world attain a sense of structural integration and political efficacy within their nation-states, develop civic participation skills, and reflective cultural, national and global identities.

Jim Banks, Walter Parker
April 28, 2:15 to 3:45 p.m.
Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, Ballroom Level, Room 303 C

While a great deal is known about the teacher labor market as a whole, the specifics of minority teachers鈥 career movements are largely unknown. Using a decade of state administrative data, UW research reveals that African American teachers鈥 career movement features more identity matching or commitment to mission in comparison to white counterparts鈥攖hey are more likely to stay in schools serving larger proportion of African American students and more likely to switch to another school serving similar types of students. However, effective minority teachers are no more likely than their white counterparts to stay or switch to another school serving high percentage of African American students and schools that need effective African American teachers the most are still unable to keep or attract them.

Min Sun
April 29, 2:45 to 4:15 p.m.
Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, Meeting Room Level, Room 215

This symposium examines three years in which a multidisciplinary team of UW researchers and Bellevue School District educators engaged in iterative co-design and enactment of an advanced placement project-based learning Physics 1 course. Design-based implementation research drove the research-practice partnership focusing on a 鈥榣earning while doing鈥 approach. Researchers will discuss impacts of the co-design process on practice and theory, teachers鈥 roles in promoting student engagement, multilevel modeling of student affect in the course, students鈥 perspectives on entry points/barriers that affect their course engagement over time, and the process of reframing professional development through a networked improvement community.

Nancy Vye, Amy Sharp, Sarah Evans, Sarah Ward
April 30, 2:15 to 3:45 p.m.
Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, Meeting Room Level, Room 209

Professor Joy Williamson-Lott, whose research examines the reciprocal relationship between social movements and institutions of higher education will discuss her current book project. Her most recent book, 鈥淩adicalizing the Ebony Tower: Black Colleges and the Black Freedom Struggle in Mississippi,鈥 examines issues of institutional autonomy, institutional response to internal and external pressures, and the relationship between historically black colleges and the Civil Rights and Black Power Movements.

Joy Williamson-Lott
April 30, 4:05 to 5:35 p.m.
Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, Meeting Room Level, Room 206 A

With the proliferation of alternative teacher certification routes in recent years, particularly in historically underserved communities, this session will focus on the implications of teacher education鈥檚 changing landscape for educational equity. Among topics to be explored are alternative pathways in teacher preparation, visions for improving the landscape of teacher education in the U.S., and how the education policy agenda promoted by the Trump administration will influence different types of teacher education programs.

Kenneth Zeichner
April 30, 4:05 to 6:05 p.m.
Grand Hyatt San Antonio, Second Floor, Lone Star Ballroom Salon A

***

Alumni and friends attending AERA are invited to join the 爆走黑料's faculty and students at an April 30 reception that will take place from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at La Dahlia in historic Sunset Station. .

Additional UW 爆走黑料 research being presented includes:


Amy Sharp, Elizabeth Sanders, Susan Nolen
April 28, 10:35 a.m. to 12:05 p.m.
Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, Ballroom Level, Room 303 C


Deborah McCutcheon, et al
April 29, 8:15 to 9:45 a.m.
Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, Meeting Room Level, Room 209


Filiberto Barajas-Lopez
April 29, 10:35 a.m. to 12:05 p.m.
Grand Hyatt San Antonio, Lone Star Ballroom Salon F


Susan Desha Stahl
April 30, 8:15 to 10:15 a.m.
Grand Hyatt San Antonio, Lone Star Ballroom Salon E


Philip Bell, et al
May 1, 10:35 a.m. to 12:05 p.m.
Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, Meeting Room Level, Room 221 C


Kenneth Zeichner
May 1, 12:25 to 1:55 p.m.
Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, Ballroom Level, 301 A&B


Jessica Rigby, Stephanie Forman, Rebecca Lewis
May 1, 2:15 to 3:45 p.m.
Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center, Meeting Room Level, Room 215

Contact

Dustin Wunderlich, Director for Marketing and Communications
206-543-1035, dwunder@uw.edu