Index

Lisa Fetman (Independent Scholar, USA)
Linsay DeMartino (Arizona State University, USA)

Transformative Democracy in Educational Leadership and Policy

ISBN: 978-1-83753-545-3, eISBN: 978-1-83753-544-6

Publication date: 21 June 2024

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

Fetman, L. and DeMartino, L. (2024), "Index", Transformative Democracy in Educational Leadership and Policy (Transforming Education Through Critical Leadership, Policy and Practice), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 169-176. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83753-544-620241007

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Lisa Fetman and Linsay DeMartino. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Ability grouping
, 39

Abolitionist pedagogy
, 102, 104–105

Abolitionist teaching
, 41–42

Abolitionist Teaching Network
, 135

Achievement gap
, 46–48

Activism
, 132–133

Adequate yearly progress (AYP)
, 11

Administrators
, 131

Advanced Placement (AP)
, 23, 39–40

Aesthetic care
, 78

Affirmative action laws
, 17–19

African American curriculum and courses, erasure of
, 22–23

African American Studies
, 23, 63

Aggressive militarism
, 49

All Handicapped Children’s Act
, 9

American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
, 17–18

Anti transgender (trans) legislation
, 26–27

Antiwar movement
, 41

Aspirational capital
, 77, 104, 106

Asset-based educational practices
, 76

Asset-based practices
, 76–77

Authentic care/caring
, 77–78

at MHS
, 84–85

Authoritarianism
, 58

Baby boom to equity strides in 1970
, 7–10

democracy in education From 1950s to 1970s
, 8

“Back-to-basics” movement
, 7

Becoming leaders of social justice
, 129–131

Binary narrative
, 37–38

Black, Indigenous, and/or People of Color (BIPoC)
, 9, 129–130

Black American curriculum and courses, erasure of
, 22–23

Black freedom
, 41

Black Lives Matter movement
, 25–26, 50

“Blame-the teacher” movement
, 11

Brave learning communities (BLCs)
, 135

Butler’s theory of performativity
, 32

Change movements
, 50–51

“Chilling out” effect
, 7

“Choice” concept in education
, 38

Civil Rights Act, The (1964)
, 9

Civil Rights Movement, The
, 7–9

Co-teaching
, 40

Coalition of Essential Schools (CES)
, 43–44

Coalition-building
, 40

Collaboration as norm
, 117–118

Committee of Ten
, 3–5

Common Core State Standards (CCSS)
, 12–13

Common schools movement
, 1

Communication
, 114–116

Community
, 113

nights for health and wellness
, 117

school as
, 112–113

Community cultural wealth (CCW)
, 74, 103, 105

of DHS students
, 105, 112

students’ aspirational capital
, 106

students’ familial capital
, 107

students’ linguistic capital
, 106–107

students’ migration capital
, 111–112

students’ navigational capital
, 107–108

students’ resistant capital
, 108–111

students’ social capital
, 107

Community-organizing approach
, 132–133

Conservative modernization
, 13–27

affirmative action laws
, 17–19

attacks on critical race theory
, 21–22

contemporary challenges to advancement of transformative democracy in education
, 14–15, 17

of education
, 14

erasure of Black and African American curriculum and courses
, 22–23

fundamental rights for women
, 23–24

Mexican American/Raza Studies in Tucson Unified School District
, 20–21

post-Katrina and transformation of New Orleans Public Schools
, 19–20

recent opposition
, 18–19

theory applied to practice
, 27

Contemporary interpretations of hegemony
, 31–33

Converging pandemics
, 24–26

Counter-hegemonic foundation
, 60

COVID-19

impact of
, 25

pandemic
, 25

Critical action
, 66

Critical care
, 78

Critical consciousness
, 64–66, 68

praxis
, 66–68

praxis, education, and Freire
, 67–68

theory applied to practice
, 69

transformative practices in K-12 schools
, 68–69

Critical curriculum leadership
, 134–135

Critical Friends Group
, 80–81

Critical hope
, 78–79

Critical inclusivity
, 118–120

Critical inquiry groups
, 131–132

Critical race theory (CRT)
, 21–22, 42, 57, 133

attacks on
, 21–22

Critical reading and reflection circles
, 62–63

Critical reflection
, 65

Critical teaching and leadership practices
, 131–132

Critically-just democracy
, 58–62

countering political and social movements as transformative action
, 63–64

and education
, 59–60

mis/interpretation of democracy and education
, 61–62

to transformative action
, 62–64

we teams implementation
, 60

Critically-just educators
, 60–61

Cultural capital
, 103–104

Cultural hegemony
, 36

in education
, 33–34

Culture of community, building and sustaining
, 116–117

Curriculum leaders
, 134–135

Curriculum leadership
, 133

#CurriculumSoWhite movement
, 137

Curriculum theory
, 133

Decolonizing curriculum
, 133

Decolonizing education
, 133–136

Deficit thinking
, 76

Democracy
, 1–2, 44–45, 55, 58

aligning critically-just democracy to transformative action
, 62–64

critically-just democracy
, 58–62

in education
, 3, 5–6, 13, 56, 58

education evolutions
, 4–5, 7, 10–11, 13

expanding educational opportunities
, 64–68

mis/interpretation of
, 61–62

new dogma of
, 13–27

theories
, 5–7

veneer of democracy at DHS
, 102–103

Democratic education
, 1–2

Democratic system
, 61

Desegregation
, 7, 9

Desert High School (DHS)
, 42–43, 80, 93, 97, 128–129

amplifying student voice at
, 80–82

community cultural wealth
, 103, 105, 112

data from
, 93, 103, 105

dispossession at
, 99–102

funds of knowledge
, 103

hegemony at
, 98–99

neoliberalism at
, 93–98

veneer of democracy at
, 102–103

Detracking
, 40

Dewey, John
, 1–2

Dispossession
, 44, 51, 128

achievement gap
, 46–48

change movements
, 50–51

contemporary interpretations of
, 45–51

at DHS
, 99–102

foundations of
, 45

perpetuation of dispossession in schools, policies, and practices
, 51–53

re/envisioning opportunities in schools, policies, and practices
, 53–54

within school “culture”
, 99–100

within school structures
, 101–102

school-to-prison pipeline
, 48–50

theory applied to practice
, 54

Economic debt
, 47

Education
, 1–2, 36, 68, 132–133

conservative modernization
, 13–27

contemporary challenges to advancement of transformative democracy in
, 14–15

critically-just democracy and
, 59–60

cultural hegemony in
, 33–34

democracy in
, 3, 5, 13, 56, 58

evolutions
, 4–5, 7, 10

hegemony and philosophy of
, 32–33

mis/interpretation of
, 61–62

Educational debt
, 47

Educational institutions
, 33

Educational system
, 59

Educative dimension
, 74

Educative leaders
, 74

Educative leadership
, 74

Educators
, 2–3, 34–35, 50, 120–121

educator-driven communication
, 115

of social justice
, 128–131

Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA)
, 9

Emancipatory pedagogy
, 36

Embark Education
, 137–138

English as a Second Language (ESL)
, 39–40

English as Language of Power
, 98–99

in assessment
, 99

English Language Development (ELD)
, 42, 80, 93, 128–129

block
, 52–53

counselor
, 101

English proficiency test (EPT)
, 96

English-language learners, students labeled
, 125

Equitable school collaboration team
, 132–133

Equity audits
, 122, 134–135

Equity community collaboration audit
, 132–133

Equity strides in 1970s, baby boom to
, 7–10

Ethic of care
, 77, 82

Ethic of community
, 62

Ethical dimension
, 74–75

Ethnicity
, 124

Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)
, 12–13

Familial capital
, 104, 107

Finding Voice club, The
, 102

Finding Voice project, The
, 82

Foundational theories
, 4

Freire, Paolo
, 20–21, 36, 67–68

Fundamental Rights for Women
, 15, 23–24

Funds of knowledge
, 103

Gender identity
, 126

Gifted and talented ability groups (GT ability groups)
, 39–40

Gramsci, Antonio
, 29–31

Guest speakers
, 117, 135

Harvard University, cases of
, 18–19

Hegemonic mechanisms
, 33

Hegemony
, 29, 37, 128

contemporary interpretations of
, 31–33

cultural hegemony in education
, 33–34

at DHS
, 98–99

English as language of power
, 98–99

English as language of power in assessment
, 99

heteronormativity and
, 31–32

historical foundations
, 30–31

neoliberalism as hegemony in schools, policies, and practices
, 42–44

perpetuation of hegemony in schools
, 33

and philosophy of education
, 32–33

Heteronormative hegemony
, 32

Heteronormative matrix
, 31

Heteronormativity
, 31–32

Heterosexual matrix
, 31

Heterosexuality
, 31–32

Hidden curriculum
, 34–36

countering hegemony in schools
, 36–37

re/envisioning opportunities in schools, policies, and practices
, 53–54

theory applied to practice
, 54

Hip-Hop-Based Education (HHBE)
, 41–42

Historical debt
, 47–48

Ideological hegemony
, 33

Implicit bias
, 48–49

Individual praxis
, 66

Information age
, 136–138

Innovations
, 86–87

Institute of Educational Sciences (IES)
, 17–18

Intellectuals
, 33

International Baccalaureate (IB)
, 39–40

Interview protocol
, 122

Justice

desire for
, 103–105

enactments of
, 112–113

falling short of
, 120–121

stagnation of and desire for
, 93–103

K-12 landscape
, 84

K-12 schools
, 79

transformative practices in
, 68–69, 71, 75

Knowledge, funds of
, 103

Ladson-Billings, Gloria
, 21–22

Leadership
, 71–72

Learning
, 56

Least restrictive environment (LRE)
, 9

Linguistic capital
, 77, 104, 106–107

Linguistic hegemony
, 99

Linguistic imperialism
, 98

Love, Bettina
, 41–42

Mann, Horace
, 1–2

Marginalized youth
, 58

Meritocracy myth in action
, 39–40

#MeToo Movement
, 23–24, 32, 50

Mexican American Studies (MAS)
, 20, 63

program
, 20

in Tucson Unified School District
, 20–21

Migration capital
, 104, 111–112

Military complex
, 49

Millennium High School (MHS)
, 42, 79–80, 82–83, 112–113, 117, 119–120, 128–129

authentic caring at
, 84–85

enactments of justice and transformation at
, 112–113

falling short of justice and transformation at
, 120–121

members of millennium high school community
, 83

Mis/interpretation of democracy
, 61–62

Multicultural initiatives
, 35–36

Multilingual learners (MLs)
, 40

Myth of meritocracy
, 39–40

Nation at Risk, A (1980)
, 10–11, 37

democracy in education From 1980s to 1990s
, 10

National Center for Educational Statistics (NCES)
, 17–18

National Education Association (NEA)
, 4–5

National School Lunch Program (NSLP)
, 87

Navigational capital
, 77, 104, 107–108

Neoliberal discourses
, 42

Neoliberal policy
, 11–12

Neoliberal principles
, 13–14

Neoliberalism
, 10–11, 13–14, 36–37, 42, 45, 128

contemporary interpretations of
, 39–40

countering neoliberalism in schools
, 40–42

at DHS
, 93–98

dispossession at DHS
, 99–102

hegemony at DHS
, 98–99

as hegemony in schools, policies, and practices
, 42–44

historical and present foundations
, 37–38

myth of meritocracy in action
, 39–40

re/envisioning opportunities in schools, policies, and practices
, 53–54

standardized testing
, 95–97

state report card
, 94–95

theory applied to practice
, 54

turnaround
, 97–98

veneer of democracy at DHS
, 102–103

Neuroplasticity theory
, 129

New Orleans Public Schools (NOLA Public Schools)
, 51

transformation of
, 19–20

No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB Act)
, 11–13, 37–39, 61–62, 94

democracy in education from 2000s to present
, 12

“No excuses” charter schools
, 49

Norm, collaboration as
, 117–118

Null curriculum
, 133

Pandemics, converging
, 24–26

Performativity
, 29, 50–51, 53

Perpetuation of hegemony in schools
, 33

Philosophers
, 45

Picower, Bree
, 46, 136–137

Pinar, William
, 57

Political democracy
, 56

Political movements as transformative action, countering
, 63–64

Politicians
, 57

Post-Katrina
, 19–20

“Post-truth” era
, 136–137

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
, 101

Praxis
, 66–68

Primarily white institutions (PWIs)
, 50

Primarily working-class schools
, 35

Professional development (PD)
, 97

Professional learning communities (PLCs)
, 135

Progressive educators
, 58

Public accountability
, 38

Public discourse
, 39

Public education
, 1–2

Race
, 124

Race to the Top (RTTP)
, 94

Race-conscious admissions policies
, 19

Racial justice, continuing fight for
, 25–26

Radical care
, 78

Radical consciousness
, 134–135

Raza studies in Tucson Unified School District
, 20–21

Recovery School District (RSD)
, 20

Red Scare, The
, 7

Reflective prompts
, 54

Reflective prompts
, 69

Resistant capital
, 104, 108, 111

Roe v. Wade
, 23–24

Rote memorization techniques
, 35

School “culture”, dispossession within
, 99–100

School community
, 112–113, 121

building and sustaining culture of community
, 116–117

collaboration as norm
, 117–118

community nights for health and wellness
, 117

critical inclusivity
, 118–120

falling short of justice and transformation at millennium high school
, 120–121

revisiting transparency and communication
, 114–116

theory applied to practice
, 121–122

transparent communication across
, 87–88

School structures, dispossession within
, 101–102

School-as-business model
, 56–57

School-to-prison pipeline
, 48–50

School-wide critical reading and reflection circles
, 135

Schools
, 7, 9, 46, 51, 53

countering hegemony in
, 36–37

countering neoliberalism in
, 40–42

neoliberalism as hegemony in
, 42–44

perpetuation of hegemony in
, 33

re/envisioning opportunities in
, 53–54

transformative practices in
, 75–80

Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics-focused courses (STEM-focused courses)
, 32

Sexual orientation
, 126

Social and emotional learning (SEL)
, 131

Social capital
, 104, 107

Social class
, 123

Social Justice Education Project (SJEP)
, 20–21

Social justice in education
, 13

Social media platform in information age
, 136–138

Social movements as transformative action, countering
, 63–64

Social-emotional learning (SEL)
, 131

Socio-political consciousness
, 59

Sociopolitical debt
, 47–48

Special education (SpEd)
, 39–40

State standardized test (SST)
, 95–96

Student council (StuCo)
, 51

Student Success Team (StST)
, 115

Student voice

at desert high school
, 80–82

opportunities
, 79–80

Students
, 52–53, 108, 115

labeled English-language learners
, 125

labeled with disabilities
, 124–125

Teach For America (TFA)
, 50

Teachers
, 131

Team teaching
, 40

Test scores
, 95–96

1619 Project
, 22–23

TikTok
, 137

Tracking
, 39–40

Transformation

desire for
, 103–105

enactments of
, 112–113

falling short of
, 120–121

stagnation of and desire for
, 93–103

Transformational dimension
, 73–74

Transformative action
, 72

aligning critically-just democracy to
, 62–64

countering political and social movements as
, 63–64

plan
, 138

Transformative democracy

contemporary challenges to advancement of transformative democracy in education
, 14–15

in schools
, 21–22

Transformative educators
, 132–133

Transformative leaders
, 73–74, 76, 112–113, 131

Transformative leadership
, 80

in (in)action
, 80–82

in action
, 82–88

amplifying student voice at desert high school
, 80–82

collectives
, 3–4

critical dimension
, 72–73

critical practices
, 84–85

desire for justice and transformation
, 103–105

educative dimension
, 74

educative practices
, 86–87

ethical dimension
, 74–75

ethical practices
, 87–88

framework
, 71, 75

millennium high school
, 82–83

neoliberalism at DHS
, 93–98

school as community
, 113–121

stagnation of and desire for justice and transformation
, 93–103

stories from field
, 105, 112–113

transformational dimension
, 73–74

transformational practices
, 85–86

Transformative PD
, 135–136

Transformative practices
, 127

asset-based practices
, 76–77

authentic caring
, 77–78

creating and sustaining
, 128–138

critical hope
, 78–79

educators for social justice and activism
, 130

in K-12 Schools
, 68–69, 71, 75

stories from field
, 80, 82, 88

student voice opportunities
, 79–80

theory applied to practice
, 88

transformative leadership framework
, 71–75

transformative practices in schools
, 75–80

Transformative practices survey
, 121–122

Transformative Professional Development (PD)
, 145

Transformative school surveys
, 88

Transparency
, 114–116

Transparent communication across school community
, 87–88

Traumatic brain injuries (TBIs)
, 101

True democracy
, 137

Tucson Unified School District (TUSD)
, 20, 60

Turnaround
, 43, 82

U.S. Department of Education
, 10

University of North Carolina (UNC)
, 17–19

Veneer of democracy
, 14, 61–62

at DHS
, 102–103

Visioning process
, 74

Voting Rights Act (1965)
, 47–48

West, Cornel
, 13, 41, 49

White savior
, 129–130

Women

anti-trans legislation
, 26–27

continuing fight for racial justice
, 25–26

converging pandemics
, 24–26

impact of COVID-19
, 25

fundamental rights for
, 23–24

Me Too Movement
, 23–24

overturning of Roe v. Wade
, 24

rights movements
, 32

Youth participatory action research (YPAR)
, 20–21

YouTube
, 137

Zero-tolerance discipline policies
, 48, 61–62