Publication | Closed Access
Transforming Out-of-School Challenges Into Opportunities
61
Citations
36
References
2014
Year
Educational OutcomesCommunity Schools ImplementationCritical Urban TheoryEducationCommunity SchoolsSchool OrganizationSuburban EducationSocial SciencesEducational EquityEducational AccountabilitySociology Of EducationInclusive EducationSchool FundingSchool FunctioningCivic EngagementPublic PolicyEducation PoliticsPublic EducationCommunity DevelopmentSecondary EducationSociologyUrban Social JusticeEducation ReformEducation Policy
For more than three decades, community schools have aimed to improve education and neighborhood outcomes in low-income, urban communities of color. In this article, we position community schools as a place-based reform strategy that pushes back on top-down accountability systems. While most research on urban school reform focuses on improving in-school factors, this study shifts the research lens to out-of-school factors that shape low-income, urban school-community contexts. The purpose of this study is to examine the out-of-school challenges that instigated a neighborhood-driven community school implementation in a racially diverse and low- to working-class community in the urban Midwest. Drawing on interviews and archival data, critical urban theory is used to guide our analysis. This case study details the political and socioeconomic out-of-school forces that preceded a community schools implementation. In doing so, we consider how school leaders can confront out-of-school challenges across similar urban contexts, and conclude with implications for future research.
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