When Educators Attempt to Make "Community" a Part of Classroom Learning: The Dangers of (Mis)appropriating Students' Communities into Schools
In this article, we explore the ambiguous associations of the term “community” within one professional development (PD) program that engaged teachers in using mobile technologies to learn about data. We argue that multiple meanings of “community” are embedded in competing ideological discourses that reproduce and/or contest relationships of power that shape the educational experiences of students of color. We examine how the norms, representational artifacts, and tools in the PD we studied co-constructed various meanings of “community.” Lastly, we explore the implications of our findings for PD facilitators by disambiguating other analyses that are often conflated with “community.”
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