PRESENTING SUPERB RESEARCH THAT ADVANCES THE FIELD OF EDUCATION
Moving From Trendy Growth in Favor of Asset-Based Mindsets
- Publisher
Myers Education Press - ISBN 9781975506926
- Language English
- Pages 175 pp.
- Size 6" x 9"
- Request Exam Copy
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- Publisher
Myers Education Press - ISBN 9781975506933
- Language English
- Pages 175 pp.
- Size 6" x 9"
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- Publisher
Myers Education Press - ISBN 9781975506940
- Language English
- Pages 175 pp.
- Size 6" x 9"
- Request E-Exam Copy
Promoting a growth mindset in PreK-12 schools is a valuable educational trend, based on the idea that students who believe they can grow and improve will succeed more easily. However, when students struggle academically, there’s often an undergirded assumption that they—and sometimes their families—are not trying hard enough or they just need to fit into a standardized mold. This deficit thinking places blame on students’ perceived limitations and can lead to lower expectations or biases toward students who come from diversified backgrounds, encompassing ability, socioeconomic status, race, language, gender, or culture. As an alternative approach, this book promotes the universal adoption of Asset-Based Practices (ABPs). ABPs encourage educators to see and honor the strengths in each student’s identity. ABPs shift our focus to the assets that students and families bring into the classroom, viewing differences as resources rather than obstacles. This means recognizing and building on students’ cultural, linguistic, and community-based knowledge to make learning richer and more inclusive for everyone.
Implementing an asset-based approach can transform our classrooms. Research shows that students perform better and feel more motivated when they’re recognized and valued for who they are. Bringing students’ lived experiences into the curriculum can help them develop positive identities and a stronger sense of belonging, which boosts their academic and social growth. Instead of focusing on “fixing” students, ABPs ask us to adapt our teaching to connect with students’ cultural backgrounds and experiences, coupled with recognizing the wealth of knowledge that students bring from their families and communities.
Switching to an asset-based approach helps us move away from simply encouraging perseverance or grit in students. Instead, it invites us to take responsibility for creating an environment where every student feels they belong and can succeed. With ABPs, we’re able to create more inclusive and affirming classrooms for all students, where their identities are seen as strengths, not obstacles, and where their cultural, linguistic, and community knowledge is a foundation for learning.
Innovative and creative methodologies and practices that aspiring and practicing educators can use right away are the primary focus of this book. Because the editors and contributors are former or current PreK-12 practitioners, and many are also educational scholars, this book is written for a broad educational audience. Moving from Trendy Growth in Favor of Asset-Based Mindsets is for both preservice and practicing teachers across PreK-12 grade levels, school types, and geographic regions looking to improve their practice. To accomplish this, the editors and contributors provide entry points for transforming the educational landscape in favor of liberatory, asset-based practices in PreK-12 schools.
Additionally, this book is ideal for teacher and administrator preparation programs, as well as PreK-12 professional development, because it guides readers through theoretical and empirical discussions, supported by hands-on applications that enable real-time application, and concludes with interactive features, like case studies, extension activities, and discussion prompts.
Linsay DeMartino
Linsay DeMartino, Ph.D. (she/her) is an Assistant Professor in the Division of Educational Leadership & Innovation housed within Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College at Arizona State University. Her research considers equitable advancements in educational spaces, with an emphasis on the transformative possibilities and opportunities within justice-based educational communities. Prior to her role as a scholar-practitioner, Dr. DeMartino served as a special education teacher, inclusion specialist, special education department chair, and instructional data and intervention coordinator. She was honored to be mentored as a preservice and early career teacher by a veteran Mexican-American Studies (MAS) educator in Tucson Unified School District. The opportunity to co-teach in the Social Justice Education Project (SJEP) was a life-changing experience for her. The educators, students, and families affiliated with the MAS program educated her, whereas the university schooled her. She will be forever grateful for the gifts of knowledge, activism, and fierce love. Dr. DeMartino currently resides in the shadow of Tonto National Forest with her perfectly imperfect pup, Lorca.
Lisa Fetman
Lisa Fetman, Ph.D. (she/her) is an independent scholar with adjunct faculty appointments at Florida Southern College (Educational Leadership) and the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs (Teaching and Learning). Dr. Fetman formerly taught K-12 Spanish in Chicago, Illinois and Tucson, Arizona, working in diverse communities and sociocultural/sociopolitical contexts. Her research encompasses the enactment of education policy within culturally diverse schools, particularly related to the effects of neoliberalism on policy creation, implementation, and disruption. As a former language teacher, she deeply cares about the education of emergent multilinguals, and hence also focuses her scholarship on the intersection of policies and practices within linguistically diverse student populations. Dr. Fetman teaches coursework in diversity and inclusion, curriculum and instruction, culturally responsive leadership, and instructional leadership. She currently resides in Chicago, Illinois with her husband, daughter, and chihuahua. She continuously commits to transforming education policies and practices in her personal and professional life in the Windy City.