CFP: 28th Ethnography in Education Research Forum
Francis M. Hult
fmhult at dolphin.upenn.edu
Fri Jul 28 22:04:13 UTC 2006
28th Annual Ethnography in Education Research Forum
Ethnography and Education in Trying Times
February 23-24, 2007
Center for Urban Ethnography
University of Pennsylvania
Graduate School of Education
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
***CALL for PAPERS***
ONLINE SUBMISSIONS OPEN: August 1, 2006
SUBMISSION DEADLINE: October 15, 2006
NOTIFICATION: Early November 2006
PRESENTATION SCHEDULE: Early January 2007
In most parts of the world attempts to homogenize education must compete with
ever-expanding cultural and linguistic diversity. Standardized educational
goals and assessments are becoming dominant as school systems seek to prepare
students to participate in broad national and international markets. Yet
students and teachers also live their lives in rich and vibrant local
communities, which do not conform to standardized knowledges and practices.
The 28th Ethnography in Education Research Forum seeks to explore directions
for education in these trying times. What are the implications of educational
standardization for the value of local knowledges in education? How can
ethnographers put local knowledges and practices back on national and
international agendas?
The Ethnography in Education Research Forum invites papers that explore these
issues by ethnographically documenting grassroots responses to varying levels
of educational policy, describing teacher-researcher collaboration in the
development of equitable educational practices, making theoretical and
methodological connections between the study of societal level phenomena and
local processes, bringing to light covert responses to overt policy decisions,
and critically examining relationships between academic and public interests.
Plenary Speakers:
Marilyn Cochran-Smith, Boston College
Frederick Erickson, University of California at Los Angeles
Gloria Ladson-Billings, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Susan Lytle, University of Pennsylvania
All proposals may be submitted online beginning August 1:
http://www.gse.upenn.edu/cue/forum.php
TYPES OF PRESENTATIONS:
Proposals are requested for presentations in the following categories:
1. Individual Paper (Traditional or Work-in-Progress)
2. Group Sessions (Traditional or Work-in-Progress)
3. Data Analysis Consultation
Practitioner Research: For Individual Papers and Group Sessions, you may
choose to designate your presentation as PRACTITIONER RESEARCH. Practitioner
research presentations focus on research by teachers and other practitioners
in educational settings (e.g., school principals, counselors, non-teaching
aides, parents, students, and other members of school communities).
Practitioner research presentations are particularly featured on Saturday,
known as Practitioner Research Day.
1. Individual Papers: (15 minutes)
Individual papers by one or more authors. Either final analyses, results, and
conclusions (Traditional) or preliminary findings and tentative conclusions
(Work-in-Progress) may be submitted. Indicate practitioner research, if you
so choose.
2. Group Sessions (75 minutes)
A full session of no fewer than three, and no more than six presenters,
including a discussant. These sessions may vary in organization: a set of
individual papers, a panel discussion, a plan for interaction among members of
the audience in discussion or workshop groups are possible formats. Either
final analyses, results, and conclusions (Traditional) or preliminary findings
and tentative conclusions (Work-in-Progress) may be submitted. Indicate
practitioner research, if you so choose.
3. Data Analysis Consultation (30 minutes)
Individual submissions only. Presenters offer data along with questions about
analysis for consultation with expert researchers and conference
participants. Data analysis consultation is by definition Work-in-Progess.
Presenters must follow specific guidelines available online:
http://www.gse.upenn.edu/cue/dacinstructions.php
PROPOSAL EVALUATION CRITERIA:
1. Significance for education
2. Conceptual orientation
3. Methodology
4. Interpretation
5. Quality of analysis
6. Depth and clarity
FORMAT OF PROPOSALS:
Everyone must submit:
A. Summary (limit 100 words)
This should be a brief overview of the work to be presented.
B. Description (limit 1500 words)
Selection is based on the description. A detailed description of the work to
be presented should be submitted including conceptual orientation, data
collection and analysis methods, data interpretation, and significance to
education.
Special Instruction for Group Sessions
Submit Summary and Description of the session overall, as specified above. If
the session consists of a set of individual papers, the group session proposal
must also include a description for each individual presentation.
All proposals must be submitted online:
http://www.gse.upenn.edu/cue/forum.php
Questions
E-mail: cue at gse.upenn.edu
More information about the Linganth
mailing list