Affiliation:
1. University of Arizona
2. Stanford University
3. City University of New York–Hunter College
4. University of Texas at Austin
5. Independent Scholar
Abstract
We used a situated approach to examine the aftermath of citations for racial disparities in special education and discipline. The study was conducted in one suburban school district and examined staff’s interpretations and responses to multiple disproportionality citations. We found that historical, spatial, and sociocultural contexts mediated stakeholders’ interpretations and reactions to citations and the consequences of their responses. Our findings demonstrate how a history of race relations in the district and the community as well as spatial opportunity structures shaped disability and discipline racial disparities; the consequences of a damaged imagery for multiply marginalized youth and their families in explanations of disproportionality citations; and the shortcomings of the district’s symbolic and predominately color-evasive responses as a consequence of ambiguous federal and state policy mandates.
Funder
William T. Grant Foundation
Publisher
American Educational Research Association (AERA)
Cited by
11 articles.
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