Rema Reynolds | University of California, Los Angeles (original) (raw)
Papers by Rema Reynolds
SensePublishers eBooks, 2014
American Psychological Association eBooks, 2016
Public Education Under Siege, 2013
Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education, 2015
Scholars who study educational equity and inequality in education, academic achievement gaps, and... more Scholars who study educational equity and inequality in education, academic achievement gaps, and educational opportunity offer a variety myriad of explanations as to how or whether race has any role or impact on educational experiences, access, or opportunity. Indeed, race has been an abiding question in the social sciences and education for several decades. Despite the debates within both fields regarding the meaning of race, the current popular sentiment among the lay public and many educational practitioners is that on November 4, 2008, America reached a post-racial moment with the election of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States. In other words, according to the post-racial discourse, race no longer matters, especially as it relates to people of color. The editors and contributors of this volume challenge this rhetoric and examine how and whether race operates in understanding how issues of access to productive opportunities and quality resources converge and...
Race Ethnicity and Education, 2013
Parent involvement within schools has garnered attention since the No Child Left Behind Act of 20... more Parent involvement within schools has garnered attention since the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 mandated that parent participation be a condition for federal funding. This particular caveat has been significant because issues of race and class come to the forefront when examining schools that receive federal funding. A close examination of parent involvement becomes increasingly salient, in particular for students of color who are more likely than their White peers to attend schools receiving federal funding. In this qualitative study of 16 participants, we seek to narrow the focus of parents, and pay particular attention to Black fathers. The role of Black fathers has been largely absent from the educational discourse on parent involvement at both the local and federal levels, and within the literature, the roles, practices, and strategies of involvement for Black fathers has been scant compared to their White peers. This absence from the literature is noteworthy given the important role that involvement plays in educational success coupled with Black students’ perennial underperformance in US schools. The purpose of this work is to highlight findings from a study that examined the voices, perspectives, and involvement practices that Black fathers used to build relationships with school personnel in an effort to advocate on behalf of their sons and daughters and improve their overall schooling experiences.
This narrative work highlights one Black female faculty participant's experience of the Sisters o... more This narrative work highlights one Black female faculty participant's experience of the Sisters of the Academy (SOTA) Research Boot Camp. She shares the benefits of the initiative, as well as how the program influenced her research and writing productivity as a faculty member. SOTA leadership supports Black female tenure-track and tenured faculty via offering strategies for academic productivity and expanding professional networks. The article illustrates the role Sisters of the Academy's Research Boot Camp has upon ameliorating challenges faced by Black women throughout the tenure and promotion processes.
Teacher Development, 2013
Interactions Ucla Journal of Education and Information Studies, Jul 9, 2007
UMI, ProQuest ® Dissertations & Theses. The world's most comprehensive collectio... more UMI, ProQuest ® Dissertations & Theses. The world's most comprehensive collection of dissertations and theses. Learn more... ProQuest, Holla if you hear me; giving voice to those we have missed: A qualitative examination of ...
Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education
This chapter draws from empirical research on middle-class African American families to examine t... more This chapter draws from empirical research on middle-class African American families to examine the ways middle-class African American parents and students make meaning of their experiences within public schools. In light of the current mainstream contention that the United States has entered a post-racial epoch with the election of the first African American president, this work posits that post-racial rhetoric obfuscates the continued racialized experiences of Black families regardless of class status. In particular, this work examines how middle-class African American families navigate conversations about race, agency, and structure as they relate to access and opportunities in education and society as a whole.
The Journal of Negro Education
Handbook of Critical Race Theory in Education, 2014
This chapter highlights Black middle class parent involvement and engagement in public secondary... more This chapter highlights Black middle class parent involvement and engagement in public secondary schools. Addressing two questions,: 1) What do Black middle class parents articulate as their experiences with school officials ? and 2) According to these parents, how does race influence these experiences, Black middle class parents provide critical insight into the challenges they encounter in schools. The conclusion offers implications for Critical Race theorists researching underrepresented populations and discussing the intersectionality and confluence of class and race in schools.
Parent involvement within schools has garnered attention since the No Child Left Behind Act of 20... more Parent involvement within schools has garnered attention since the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 mandated that parent participation be a condition for federal funding. This particular caveat has been significant because issues of race and class come to the forefront when examining schools that receive federal funding. A close examination of parent involvement becomes increasingly salient, in particular for students of color who are more likely than their White peers to attend schools receiving federal funding. In this qualitative study of 16 participants, we seek to narrow the focus of parents, and pay particular attention to Black fathers. The role of Black fathers has been largely absent from the educational discourse on parent involvement at both the local and federal levels, and within the literature, the roles, practices, and strategies of involvement for Black fathers has been scant compared to their White peers. This absence from the literature is noteworthy given the important role that involvement plays in educational success coupled with Black students’ perennial underperformance in US schools. The purpose of this work is to highlight findings from a study that examined the voices, perspectives, and involvement practices that Black fathers used to build relationships with school personnel in an effort to advocate on behalf of their sons and daughters and improve their overall schooling experiences.
A year long study group brought teachers and researchers working in urban contexts in US public s... more A year long study group brought teachers and researchers working in urban contexts in US public schools together to examine literacy practices incorporating students’ community literacies into schooled tasks. The goal was to provide teacher development in making connections across their students’ community literacies and the academic literacy they focused on in their classrooms. Most of the teachers initially had narrowly defined concepts of literacy, equating it with traditional school tasks. Researchers prompted identification of students’ community literacies, discussed pedagogical implications related to the inclusion of these literacies in the classroom, and collaborated in developing pedagogical orientations. Results indicate that development of teachers’ constructs of community literacies and literacy practices fostered changes in understanding students’ participation with literacy and resulting competencies. Collaboration resulted in agentic choice to counter institutional constraints threatening instructional mediation of community literacies. These results promote teacher development in literacy using collaborative models, with potential for transfer internationally.
This narrative work highlights one Black female faculty participant’s experience of the Sisters o... more This narrative work highlights one Black female faculty participant’s experience of the Sisters of the Academy (SOTA) Research Boot Camp. She shares the benefits of the initiative, as well as how the program influenced her research and writing productivity as a faculty member. SOTA leadership supports Black female tenure-track and tenured faculty via offering strategies for academic productivity and expanding professional networks. The article illustrates the role Sisters of the Academy’s Research Boot Camp has upon ameliorating challenges faced by Black women throughout the tenure and promotion processes.
SensePublishers eBooks, 2014
American Psychological Association eBooks, 2016
Public Education Under Siege, 2013
Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education, 2015
Scholars who study educational equity and inequality in education, academic achievement gaps, and... more Scholars who study educational equity and inequality in education, academic achievement gaps, and educational opportunity offer a variety myriad of explanations as to how or whether race has any role or impact on educational experiences, access, or opportunity. Indeed, race has been an abiding question in the social sciences and education for several decades. Despite the debates within both fields regarding the meaning of race, the current popular sentiment among the lay public and many educational practitioners is that on November 4, 2008, America reached a post-racial moment with the election of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States. In other words, according to the post-racial discourse, race no longer matters, especially as it relates to people of color. The editors and contributors of this volume challenge this rhetoric and examine how and whether race operates in understanding how issues of access to productive opportunities and quality resources converge and...
Race Ethnicity and Education, 2013
Parent involvement within schools has garnered attention since the No Child Left Behind Act of 20... more Parent involvement within schools has garnered attention since the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 mandated that parent participation be a condition for federal funding. This particular caveat has been significant because issues of race and class come to the forefront when examining schools that receive federal funding. A close examination of parent involvement becomes increasingly salient, in particular for students of color who are more likely than their White peers to attend schools receiving federal funding. In this qualitative study of 16 participants, we seek to narrow the focus of parents, and pay particular attention to Black fathers. The role of Black fathers has been largely absent from the educational discourse on parent involvement at both the local and federal levels, and within the literature, the roles, practices, and strategies of involvement for Black fathers has been scant compared to their White peers. This absence from the literature is noteworthy given the important role that involvement plays in educational success coupled with Black students’ perennial underperformance in US schools. The purpose of this work is to highlight findings from a study that examined the voices, perspectives, and involvement practices that Black fathers used to build relationships with school personnel in an effort to advocate on behalf of their sons and daughters and improve their overall schooling experiences.
This narrative work highlights one Black female faculty participant's experience of the Sisters o... more This narrative work highlights one Black female faculty participant's experience of the Sisters of the Academy (SOTA) Research Boot Camp. She shares the benefits of the initiative, as well as how the program influenced her research and writing productivity as a faculty member. SOTA leadership supports Black female tenure-track and tenured faculty via offering strategies for academic productivity and expanding professional networks. The article illustrates the role Sisters of the Academy's Research Boot Camp has upon ameliorating challenges faced by Black women throughout the tenure and promotion processes.
Teacher Development, 2013
Interactions Ucla Journal of Education and Information Studies, Jul 9, 2007
UMI, ProQuest ® Dissertations & Theses. The world's most comprehensive collectio... more UMI, ProQuest ® Dissertations & Theses. The world's most comprehensive collection of dissertations and theses. Learn more... ProQuest, Holla if you hear me; giving voice to those we have missed: A qualitative examination of ...
Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education
This chapter draws from empirical research on middle-class African American families to examine t... more This chapter draws from empirical research on middle-class African American families to examine the ways middle-class African American parents and students make meaning of their experiences within public schools. In light of the current mainstream contention that the United States has entered a post-racial epoch with the election of the first African American president, this work posits that post-racial rhetoric obfuscates the continued racialized experiences of Black families regardless of class status. In particular, this work examines how middle-class African American families navigate conversations about race, agency, and structure as they relate to access and opportunities in education and society as a whole.
The Journal of Negro Education
Handbook of Critical Race Theory in Education, 2014
This chapter highlights Black middle class parent involvement and engagement in public secondary... more This chapter highlights Black middle class parent involvement and engagement in public secondary schools. Addressing two questions,: 1) What do Black middle class parents articulate as their experiences with school officials ? and 2) According to these parents, how does race influence these experiences, Black middle class parents provide critical insight into the challenges they encounter in schools. The conclusion offers implications for Critical Race theorists researching underrepresented populations and discussing the intersectionality and confluence of class and race in schools.
Parent involvement within schools has garnered attention since the No Child Left Behind Act of 20... more Parent involvement within schools has garnered attention since the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 mandated that parent participation be a condition for federal funding. This particular caveat has been significant because issues of race and class come to the forefront when examining schools that receive federal funding. A close examination of parent involvement becomes increasingly salient, in particular for students of color who are more likely than their White peers to attend schools receiving federal funding. In this qualitative study of 16 participants, we seek to narrow the focus of parents, and pay particular attention to Black fathers. The role of Black fathers has been largely absent from the educational discourse on parent involvement at both the local and federal levels, and within the literature, the roles, practices, and strategies of involvement for Black fathers has been scant compared to their White peers. This absence from the literature is noteworthy given the important role that involvement plays in educational success coupled with Black students’ perennial underperformance in US schools. The purpose of this work is to highlight findings from a study that examined the voices, perspectives, and involvement practices that Black fathers used to build relationships with school personnel in an effort to advocate on behalf of their sons and daughters and improve their overall schooling experiences.
A year long study group brought teachers and researchers working in urban contexts in US public s... more A year long study group brought teachers and researchers working in urban contexts in US public schools together to examine literacy practices incorporating students’ community literacies into schooled tasks. The goal was to provide teacher development in making connections across their students’ community literacies and the academic literacy they focused on in their classrooms. Most of the teachers initially had narrowly defined concepts of literacy, equating it with traditional school tasks. Researchers prompted identification of students’ community literacies, discussed pedagogical implications related to the inclusion of these literacies in the classroom, and collaborated in developing pedagogical orientations. Results indicate that development of teachers’ constructs of community literacies and literacy practices fostered changes in understanding students’ participation with literacy and resulting competencies. Collaboration resulted in agentic choice to counter institutional constraints threatening instructional mediation of community literacies. These results promote teacher development in literacy using collaborative models, with potential for transfer internationally.
This narrative work highlights one Black female faculty participant’s experience of the Sisters o... more This narrative work highlights one Black female faculty participant’s experience of the Sisters of the Academy (SOTA) Research Boot Camp. She shares the benefits of the initiative, as well as how the program influenced her research and writing productivity as a faculty member. SOTA leadership supports Black female tenure-track and tenured faculty via offering strategies for academic productivity and expanding professional networks. The article illustrates the role Sisters of the Academy’s Research Boot Camp has upon ameliorating challenges faced by Black women throughout the tenure and promotion processes.