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Guest
Editors' IntroductionSpecial
Issue
The Integrated Reform Projects of The Center of Research on Education,
Diversity, & Excellence (CREDE)
Amanda Datnow and Susan Yonezawa
This
special issue is devoted to the Integrated Reform projects of the
Center for Research on Education, Diversity & Excellence (CREDE).
The mission of CREDE is to assist the nation's diverse students
at risk of educational failure to achieve academic excellence. CREDEs
research and development efforts focus on issues critical to the
education of linguistic and cultural minority students and those
at risk due to factors of race, poverty, or geographic location.
(Adapted from the CREDE Mission Statement. For more information
about this Center, visit its web site at www.cal.org/crede).
CREDE,
which began in 1996 and continues through 2001, is one of the national
research and development centers funded by the Office of Educational
Research and Improvement of the US Department of Education. CREDE
s administrative hub, led by Professor Roland Tharp, is located
the University of California, Santa Cruz. The 30 research projects
of CREDE span the United States, and principal investigators are
located in universities and organizations around the country.
CREDE
is divided into five research programs, each with a different area
of focus. The Integrated Reform Program of CREDE (Program 5) includes
research projects that involve the enactment, or evaluation of major
educational programs, each of which has the potential to impact
policy at local, state, tribal, and national levels. This special
issue includes articles on six of the eight Integrated Reform Projects.
This
special issue departs from JESPARs usual format of
communication features, case studies, research articles, and book
reviews. Instead, this issue includes six research articles, most
of which are qualitative. All of the articles report findings about
research currently in progress, as all of the studies are longitudinal.
While the findings reported herein might be regarded as preliminary,
in fact, they represent cutting edge research on the education of
ethnic and linguistic minority students.
This special issue begins with an article by Tharp and his colleagues
at the University of California, Santa Cruz and in the Pueblo of
Zuni, New Mexico, who are jointly engaged in a school reform effort
in Zuni. Their article, "Seven More Mountains and a Map
"
describes the obstacles to reform in Zuni and in Native American
communities more generally, situating these findings in a sociohistorical
context. The authors end the article with practical information
about the conditions that might enable successful reform in Native
communities. Employing a similar theoretical framework, the second
article by Yamauchi, Ceppi, and Smith, documents the sociocultural
influences on the development of the Papahana Kaiapuni program,
an indigenous language immersion program in Hawaii. The authors
draw upon interview data and historical documents to provide an
interesting look at the development, implementation, and challenges
involved in this program designed to revive Hawaiian language and
culture.
The third
article, by Ellen McIntyre and her colleagues at the University
of Louisville, also draws on sociocultural theory to explore childrens
development in nongraded primary programs in Kentucky. This article
includes rich description and analyses of the experiences of teachers
and students in four schools serving populations who are mostly
poor and of Appalachian descent. The next article by Padron, Waxman,
and Huang also focuses closely on classroom issues. In particular,
the authors use classroom observation data to compare the classroom
instruction and learning environments of resilient and non-resilient
students in elementary schools serving predominantly Hispanic students.
Their systematic analysis of the data shows significant differences
between the experiences of resilient and non-resilient students,
yielding important implications for classroom practice.
The final
two articles in this special issue both investigate the "scaling
up" of externally developed reform models through a sociological
framework which views reform implementation as a conditional matrix.
The article by Hubbard and Mehan discusses the development of the
"AVID" untracking program in Kentucky, carefully illustrating
the dynamic interplay among structural constraints, culture, and
peoples actions that shape the implementation of the program.
The article by Yonezawa and Datnow is a cross-case analysis of 13
multicultural, multilingual elementary schools each implementing
one of six externally developed whole school designs (e.g., Comer,
Roots and Wings, etc.). The authors analyze the ways in which the
state, district, design teams, and schools interacted to support
some reforms and weaken others.
Taken as a group, the articles in this special issue on the Integrated
Reform projects of CREDE contribute important knowledge in areas
in which there has historically been a void -- including the education
of Native Americans, Hawaiians, and Appalachians, and the scaling
up of school reform models. These articles address some of the most
important issues involved in the education of the richly diverse
student populations that comprise Americas urban, rural, and
tribal schools.
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