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Preparing Teachers of English Language Learners: Empirical Evidence and Policy Implications
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In: education policy analysis archives; Vol 21 (2013); 20 ; archivos analiticos de politicas educativas; Vol 21 (2013); 20 ; Arquivos Analíticos de Políticas Educativas; Vol 21 (2013); 20 ; 1068-2341 (2013)
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4 |
¡Vamos! How School Leaders Promote Equity and Excellence for Bilingual Students
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In: College of Education Faculty Research and Publications (2012)
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Inadvertent Exemplars: Life History Portraits of Two Socially Just Principals
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In: College of Education Faculty Research and Publications (2012)
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Slogging and Stumbling Toward Social Justice in a Private Elementary School: The Complicated Case of St. Malachy
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In: College of Education Faculty Research and Publications (2010)
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Improving Bilingual Service Delivery in Catholic Schools through Two-Way Immersion
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In: College of Education Faculty Research and Publications (2010)
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Improving Bilingual Service Delivery in Catholic Schools through Two-Way Immersion
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In: Journal of Catholic Education (2010)
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Race, Power, and (In)equity Within Two-way Immersion Settings
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In: College of Education Faculty Research and Publications (2009)
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10 |
The Grammar of Catholic Schooling and Radically "Catholic" Schools
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In: College of Education Faculty Research and Publications (2008)
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Abstract:
A "grammar of Catholic schooling" inhibits many elementary and secondary Catholic schools from reflecting on how they practice Catholic Social Teaching (CST). The values of human dignity, the common good, and a preferential option for the marginalized are central to CST. Schools can live these values by serving children who live in poverty, are racial, ethnic, and linguistic minorities, or have disabilities. This article demonstrates how a grammar of Catholic schooling has allowed Catholic schools to fall into recruitment and retention patterns antithetical to CST. Drawing upon a multicase, qualitative study of three urban Catholic elementary schools serving marginalized students, the article illustrates how select Catholic schools are breaking the grammar of Catholic schooling by practicing CST. Implications for research and practice are discussed.
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Keyword:
Catholic Church; Catholic Schools; Christian Sociology; Education; Elementary Schools; Linguistic Minorities; Poverty
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URL: https://epublications.marquette.edu/edu_fac/109 https://epublications.marquette.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1109&context=edu_fac
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The Grammar of Catholic Schooling and Radically “Catholic” Schools
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In: Journal of Catholic Education (2008)
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An Asset-Based Approach to Linguistic Diversity
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In: College of Education Faculty Research and Publications (2007)
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