Teacher鈥檚 College Press announced that the series titled Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies Series and edited by Django Paris, associate professor and director of the Banks Center for Educational Justice at the UW 爆走黑料, has published the first book in the series: . This book is co-storied by Timothy San Pedro, Michael Munson, Alayna Eagle Shield, Tara Ramos, Kristina Lucero and Faith Price with forward by Megan Bang, associate professor at the UW 爆走黑料. The book features a collection of short stories told in collaboration with five Native families that speak to the everyday aspects of Indigenous educational resurgence rooted in the intergenerational learning that occurs between mothers and their children.
Professor discusses the development of reading skills and comments on the debate about exposing kids to quality literature versus comics and mainstream books.
Dr. Ann Ishimaru, associate professor of educational foundations, leadership and policy, was quoted in an article published by The New York Times about new research tracking the impact of pandemic disruptions on student learning. Using data comparing test results from the past year with earlier years, the findings paint an alarming picture of an education system plagued by racial and socioeconomic inequities that have only gotten worse. But contrary to images conjured by phrases like "learning loss," almost all students made gains during the pandemic, just at a slower rate than normal. Additionally, the usefulness of measuring student performance during a year of upheaval and trauma has been contested. "The problem with the learning loss narrative is it is premised on a set of racialized assumptions and focused on test scores," said Dr. Ishimaru, who engages in community-based research that centers the experiences of BIPOC and immigrant families navigating educational systems. "What if we were to focus on the learning found, and then we rebuild our education systems from that learning?" she added.
Professor comments on a U.S. Department of Education draft vision statement about inclusive early education and recommendations for implementation in schools.
Affiliate professor Megan Bang is featured in an article in The Daily Northwestern titled 鈥淓THS stopped a Native student from walking at graduation. Family members say it indicates a need for schoolwide change.鈥 The article features Megan鈥檚 son, Nimkii, and how his high school administrators did not allow him to walk at graduation because he added an eagle feather to his cap and traditional Ojibwe floral beadwork to his cap and stole. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 just give up my eagle feather in the hands of a stranger,鈥 Nimkii Curley said. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 give up my identity like that.鈥 鈥淔or us, him graduating and walking and doing what he鈥檚 done is an act of leadership,鈥 Megan said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 actually an act of community healing and familial healing.鈥 Megan also speaks about this educational injustice and her son鈥檚 act of leadership in the , and .
investigates how teachers and their students of different citizenship statuses navigate tensions in formal state-sponsored citizenship education.
The UW 爆走黑料's has been ranked among the nation's top 25 programs, with special notice for its emphasis on social-emotional health.
What operating principles should be kept in mind for building sustainable research-practice partnerships? , Shauna C. Larson Chair in Learning Sciences, offers four suggestions for short- and long-term success.
A three-video series created by the UW's and provides a glimpse inside kindergarten and 1st/2nd-grade classrooms that are developing scientific models.
majors Kimberley Banks and Julie Campos were among UW students who visited Monroe Correctional Complex as part of the honors course Education Inside Prison.