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From Old Schools to Tomorrow's Schools: Psychoeducational Assessment of African American Students
Oleh:
Green, Tonika Duren
;
Mcintosh, Angela Stephens
;
Cook-Morales, Valerie J.
;
Robinson-Zanartu, Carol
Jenis:
Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi:
Remedial and Special Education vol. 26 no. 2 (2005)
,
page 82-92.
Fulltext:
82.pdf
(143.58KB)
Isi artikel
Despite the promise of Brown v. Board of Education, segregation is alive and well in today’s schools. African American students are overrepresented in special education, have higher dropout rates, are suspended and expelled at higher rates, and are subject to persistent educational inequity. The role of psychoeducational assessment at the intersection of difference and disability has contributed to the persistent misidentification and overrepresentation of African American students in special education. However, paradigms for assessment hold promise for fulfilling the hope of Brown in tomorrow’s schools. In order to describe the impact of past and present psychoeducational assessment practices on African American learners, we track the evolution of psychoeducational assessment in the context of three eras: (a) prior to Brown, or “old schools”; (b) post Brown, an era of hope for “new schools”; and (c) the situation in today’s schools. The education of African American students and students with disabilities emerge as parallel and intertwined throughout this history.
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