Engaging Black and Latinx students through communal learning opportunities: A relevance intervention for middle schoolers in STEM elective classrooms

•A research-practice partnership sustained Black and Latinx students’ engagement.•The partnership was intentional about culturalizing STEM curriculum and instruction.•Students were more engaged when learning opportunities were communal in nature.•This investigation employed observations, surveys, fo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Contemporary educational psychology 2020-01, Vol.60, p.101833, Article 101833
Hauptverfasser: Gray, DeLeon L., McElveen, Tamika L., Green, Briana P., Bryant, Lauren H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•A research-practice partnership sustained Black and Latinx students’ engagement.•The partnership was intentional about culturalizing STEM curriculum and instruction.•Students were more engaged when learning opportunities were communal in nature.•This investigation employed observations, surveys, focus groups, and interviews. With the aim of bridging research in educational psychology and teacher education, we designed a research-practice partnership to unpack the concept of relevance from a race-reimaged perspective. Specifically, we employed a mixed-methods sequential explanatory research design to examine associations between the communal learning opportunities afforded to Black and Latinx students, and their engagement patterns during STEM activities. Within a nine-week instructional unit we provided students six opportunities to rate their scholastic activities. High levels of behavioral engagement were sustained over the course of the instructional unit. On weeks when students rated the activities as higher in communal affordances, they also reported more behavioral engagement. Classroom observations facilitated our efforts to create state space grids that show when and how teachers used emancipatory pedagogies to support students’ learning. We used these state space grids, along with teacher interviews and student focus groups, to develop contextualized illustrations of two teachers of color as they successfully provided communal forms of motivational support over the span of six observations per teacher. These strategies differed based on three key factors: where the lesson was placed within the larger instructional unit, the way teachers interpreted and responded to their students’ engagement patterns, and how the demands of the larger school environment impacted classroom dynamics.
ISSN:0361-476X
1090-2384
DOI:10.1016/j.cedpsych.2019.101833