High-poverty schools tend to have more teacher shortages and inexperienced teachers, larger class sizes, and less funding compared to more affluent schools. They also have more limited educational resources like computers, science labs, and classroom materials. Several organizations are working to address these inequities and dismantle the "school-to-prison pipeline" that pushes at-risk students out of school and into the criminal justice system through zero-tolerance policies.
Report
Share
Report
Share
1 of 15
More Related Content
Educational Empowerment Links
1. Setting the Context:
The Savage Inequalities
www.edchange.org
Compared with low-poverty schools, high-poverty schools
have:
• More teachers teaching in areas outside their
certification;
• More serious teacher turnover problems;
• More teacher vacancies;
• Larger numbers of substitute teachers;
• More limited access to computers and the Internet;
• Inadequate facilities (such as science labs);
2. Savage Inequalities continued
www.edchange.org
• More dirty or inoperative bathrooms;
• More evidence of vermin such as cockroaches and rats;
• Insufficient classroom materials;
• Less rigorous and multicultural curricula;
• Fewer experienced teachers;
• Lower teacher salaries;
• Larger class sizes; and
• Less funding
3. Resources
• http://www.alecexposed.org/wiki/ALEC_Exposed
• American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC)
[see http://www.alec.org/ ], connects conservative state
legislators with like-minded think tanks, corporations
and foundations to develop "model legislation" that can
be enacted at the state level.
• Underwood and Mead write that this "motivation for
dismantling the public education system -- creating a
system where schools do not provide for everyone -- is
ideological and motivated by profit."
4. Southern Poverty Law Center
• Southern Poverty Law Center’s new initiative: The
School-to-Prison Reform Project.
• Based in New Orleans, the project is seeking systemic
reforms through legal action, community activism and
lobbying to ensure these students get the services --
both in school and in the juvenile justice system -- that
can make the difference between incarceration and
graduation.
• http://www.alternet.org/rights/75533/
5. Truthout.org
• http://www.truth-out.org/stop-school-prison-
pipeline/1326636604
• Zero Tolerance in Philadelphia: Robert’s case
Robert was an 11-year-old in 5th grade who, in his rush
to get to school on time, put on a dirty pair of pants from
the laundry basket. He did not notice that his Boy Scout
pocketknife was in one of the pockets until he got to
school. He also did not notice that it fell out when he was
running in gym class. When the teacher found it and
asked whom it belonged to, Robert volunteered that it
was his, only to find himself in police custody minutes
later. He was arrested, suspended, and transferred to a
disciplinary school.
6. National Association for Multicultural
Education (www.nameorg.org)
• NAME is a non-profit organization that advances and
advocates for equity and social justice through multicultural
education.
- To provide opportunities for learning in order to advance
multicultural education, equity and social justice.
- To proactively reframe public debate and impact current and
emerging policies in ways that advance social, political,
economic and educational equity through advocacy, position
papers, policy statements and other strategies.
- To provide the preeminent digital clearinghouse of
resources about educational equity and social justice.
• NAME is an inclusive organization that welcomes members
who are new to the field of multiculturalism
7. The Freire Project
Paulo & Nita Freire Critical Pedagogy Congress
• http://www.freireproject.org/content/freire-international-project-
critical-pedagogy
• The Freire Project is dedicated to building an international
critical community which works to promote social justice in a
variety of cultural contexts. We are committed to conducting
and sharing critical research in social, political, and educational
locations.
• Made up of some extraordinary educators, this organization
promotes social justice education based on the work of the
Brazilian educator, Paulo Freire
• Freire’s critical pedagogy is a critique of banking education or
mindless schooling, designed to shape students and control
them as citizens for economic ends that serve the elite.
8. Rethinking Schools
• This great organization remains firmly committed to equity and to the
vision that public education is central to the creation of a humane,
caring, multiracial democracy. While writing for a broad audience,
Rethinking Schools emphasizes problems facing urban schools,
particularly issues of race.
• Issue dedicated to Stop the School-To-Prison-Pipeline:
http://www.rethinkingschools.org/archive/26_02/edit262.shtml
• Issues addressing the curriculum debacle in Tucson:
http://www.teacheractivistgroups.org/tucson/
• Issue to support the Occupy movement, Occupy the Curriculum:
rethinkingschoolsblog.wordpress.com/2011/11/07/occupy-the-curriculum/
• http://www.rethinkingschools.org/opt-in/120105.shtml
9. Challenging the Ethnic
Studies in AZ
• Work of Alberto Romero and Julio Cammarota in
Arizona:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tIhjTHq-Dgw;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dr3YhS9moYY
• http://www.georgiansforfreadom.blogspot.com/2012/01/te
ach-in-on-tucson.html
• http://www.salon.com/2012/01/13/whos_afraid_of_the_te
mpest/singleton/
• http://saveethnicstudies.org/news.shtml
10. Education Radio
• Education Radio looks at how audit
culture is being used to undermine and
privatize teacher education, decoupling
it from higher education and turning
teacher development into technical
training.
• http://education-
radio.blogspot.com/2012/02/audit-
culture-snuffing-life-out-of_05.html
11. ACLU
• http://www.aclu.org/racial-justice/school-prison-pipeline
• The American Civil Liberties Union is tracking the “school-to-
prison pipeline” trend where the policies and practices of our
nation’s public schools, especially those serving our most at-risk
children, lead to an alarming number of kids in the juvenile and
criminal justice systems.
• "Zero-tolerance" policies criminalize minor infractions of school
rules, while high-stakes testing programs encourage educators to
push out low-performing students to improve their schools'
overall test scores. Students of color are especially vulnerable to
push-out trends and the discriminatory application of discipline
12. SchooltoPrison.org
• https://www.schooltoprison.org/
• SchooltoPrison.org provides a
password-protected forum for impact
litigators, direct services attorneys and
other legal advocates across the nation
to share ideas and strategies to
challenge the push-out of children from
schools and into the juvenile and
criminal justice systems.
13. From Prisons to Slave farms:
Occupy Hegemony
• Occupy movement: Protesting machinations of
the 1%, building their own wealth at the expense
of the 99%
• Occupy education:
http://www.facebook.com/Occupyingeducation
• http://occupyeducated.org/
• http://www.stanforddaily.com/2012/02/28/an-
exhortation-for-occupation/
• http://occupyedu.tumblr.com/