School of Education Presentations

Wednesday, April 8

Type: Paper Session

Discussant: Lori Delale-O’Connor

Time: Wednesday, April 8, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 2nd Floor, Platinum B

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Type: Roundtable Session on Being Queer and Trans on Campus

Authors: Gabriel Pulido (University of Wisconsin – LaCrosse); Sergio A. Gonzalez (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Wednesday, April 8, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: Gold Level, Gold 3 – Table 1

Description:  This paper explores Queer and Trans leadership in higher education, contextualized within a U.S. history of systemic oppression and ongoing violence against marginalized communities. Through theoretical frameworks such as queer theory, homonormativity, and intersectionality, the paper examines how Queer and Trans leaders navigate visibility, cisheteronormative structures, and institutional resistance. It introduces the concept of “queertorship”—a grassroots, relational form of mentorship—as a strategy for leadership development and survival. Drawing on both literature and lived experience, the authors challenge dominant leadership models and emphasize the transformative potential of queer visibility and coalition-building. The paper concludes with reflections and questions aimed at reimagining leadership as a space of possibility, resistance, and collective liberation.

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Type: Paper Session on Rethinking Teacher–AI Partnerships in Lesson Planning and Assessment

Authors: Jie Cao (University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill); Shuman Wang (Stanford University); Christian D. Schunn (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Wednesday, April 8, 3:45–5:15pm PDT (6:45–8:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 2nd Floor, Platinum I

Description: In a mixed-design study involving 28 teachers, this research assessed the quality of mathematics learning tasks produced through teacher-GenAI collaboration and then explored who was responsible for each dimension of quality. When tasks were designed for instruction, the tasks were typically of high quality in terms of requests for explanation, cognitive demand, real-world context, and collaboration, but of lower quality in terms of connections across content and differentiation. For practice tasks, requests for explanation remained high, but quality on other dimensions was low. Instructional task quality was generally attributable to GenAI, whereas practice task quality depended upon teacher support. This study suggests that future improvements are needed on both the GenAI and teacher sides in creating high-quality practice tasks.

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Type: Paper Session on Organizing for Equity and Inclusion: Innovative Theorizing Across the P-20 Educational Ecosystem

Paper: Disrupting or Reproducing Racialized Hiring? Assessing Faculty Cluster Hiring’s Racial Equity Potential Across Disciplinary Contexts

Authors: Baili Park, Charlie Díaz, and Heather N. McCambly, (University of Pittsburgh); Román Liera (Montclair State University); Aireale J. Rodgers (University of Wisconsin – Madison)

Time: Wednesday, April 8, 3:45–5:15pm PDT (6:45–8:15pm EDT)

Location: Westin Bonaventure, Floor: Lobby Level, Santa Barbara C

Abstract: Faculty cluster hiring (FCH) is a promising approach to diversifying academia, but its effectiveness in creating systemic change remains contested. Grounded in racialized change work and institutional logics, this study examines whether and how two FCH initiatives disrupted racialized hiring mechanisms across disciplinary contexts, providing insights for implementing equity initiatives. This research contributes to broader efforts to reimagine academia by identifying the conditions under which FCH can catalyze sustained change.

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Thursday, April 9

Type: Roundtable Discussion on Parent, child, and schools: Promoting connections

Authors: Jessica McCormick, (University of Pittsburgh – Greensburg); Natalie Conrad Barnyak (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Thursday, April 9, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: Gold Level, Gold 3

Description: This mixed-methods study examines the impact of homework stress on both single-parent and two-parent families of elementary school students. The researchers examine how family structure affects perceptions and responses to homework stress through the Family Adjustment and Adaptation Response (FAAR) model and family stress theory. This study investigates homework stress among single-parent families (n=81) and two-parent families (n=153) using a researcher-created questionnaire, “Parents’ Perceptions of Homework on Family Stress, Resilience, and Quality of Life.” Results indicate that homework demands generate stress for both types of households (e.g., single and two-parent). However, homework obligations lead to higher levels of stress among single-parent families compared to two-parent households.

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Type: Roundtable Discussion on family-school engagement

Co-Author: Lori Delale-O’Connor (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Thursday, April 9, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: Gold Level, Gold 3

Description: Responding to the 2026 annual meeting theme to reflect on how to “Understand critical needs and corresponding possibilities for transformation in the field to create research to help document, transform, and address those needs,” The Family, School, and Community Partnership SIG invites researchers to attend this session to discuss needs and create networks and collaborations to respond to them. We partnered with the National Association for Family, School, and Community Engagement to collect data from practitioners and researchers focused on improving family, school, and community engagement and hope to establish a practically-informed agenda for research for the next ten years. We invite you to attend this session, where we will use appreciative inquiry to chart a course for our field that responds to the most pressing needs in the field.

Type: Symposium on Measuring and Addressing Gaps in Out-of-School Time Access

Authors: Jennifer McMurrer (Southern Methodist University), Marshall Garland (Gibson Consulting Group, Inc.), Amie Rapaport (University of Southern California), David J. Osman, (Gibson Consulting), Amanda Brown Cross (University of Pittsburgh), Courtney Grondziowski (University of Pittsburgh), Tori Nickerson (Gibson Consulting)

Time: Thursday, April 9, 2:15–3:45pm PDT (5:15–6:45pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Room 409AB

Description: This study examines the barriers to enrollment and participation in a mid-sized urban district’s no-cost summer learning program and explores how these barriers intersect academic and social-emotional impact.

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Type: Poster Session

Authors: Jazelle Pilato (University of Pittsburgh); Emily Grossnickle Peterson (American University)

Time: Thursday, April 9, 2:15–3:45pm PDT (5:15–6:45pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Poster Hall – Exhibit Hall A (Poster 9)

Description: Spatial reasoning is critical for success in STEM. While spatial skills are often measured in domain-general ways, they are seldom integrated into practical and educational (domain-specific) contexts. It’s important to explore how domain-general spatial skills translate to STEM education. The current study investigated the relation between cognitive strategies and domain-specificity in spatial reasoning. Middle school students (N = 56) completed two visuospatial reasoning tasks: one domain-general and one science-specific. Participants had their eye movements tracked while completing the spatial reasoning problems for the measurement of cognitive strategy use. Results showed that students’ cognitive strategy use is sensitive to domain specificity. This highlights the importance of integrating spatial tasks into STEM settings to better understand spatial reasoning in education.

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Type: Paper Session

Chair: Jessica McCormick (University of Pittsburgh – Greensburg)

Time: Thursday, April 9, 2:15–3:45pm PDT (5:15–6:45pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 2nd Floor, Platinum A

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Type: Roundtable Session

Authors: Sierra Stern, Keanna Cash, and Michael G. Gunzenhauser, (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Thursday, April 9, 4:15–5:45pm PDT (7:15–8:45pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Petree D, Critical Theory in Educational Research and Praxis (Table 7)

Description: This study explores how womanist caring manifests among K-12 school leaders. Helping to clarify what caring looks like in an educational setting, womanist caring, as a framework, emphasizes relational engagement, political clarity, and an ethic of risk (Beauboeuf-Lafontant, 2002). In light of persistent racial and systemic inequities, this research examines whether and to what extent school leaders embody womanist caring in their practice. We follow a qualitative design, drawing on interviews with 27 school leaders. The study provides insights as to what it looks like for school leaders to enact aspects of womanist caring and build capacity for caring in educational settings.

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Type: Paper session on responding to Anti-DEI Discourse and Legislation

Authors: Linda DeAngelo, Charlie Díaz, and Blayne D. Stone (University of Pittsburgh); Milo Lennette Dufresne-MacDonald (University of Wisconsin – Madison); Christa E. Winkler (Mississippi State University)

Time: Thursday, April 9, 4:15–5:45pm PDT (7:15–8:45pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 2nd Floor, Platinum I

Description:  This quantitative “flashpoint study” captures engineering faculty perceptions during a moment of intensifying legislative and political attacks on DEIB efforts in higher education. We examine how state-level anti-DEI legislation relates to faculty views on institutional change and their own comfort and self-efficacy in discussing and advocating for DEIB. Among 863 engineering faculty surveyed nationwide, a large majority report decreased comfort in discussing DEIB and increased concern about continuing DEIB efforts. Analyses are conducted both overall and by race/ethnicity. By offering empirical evidence of how political contexts shape faculty experiences and perceived capacity for equity work, this study provides timely insights. Findings inform institutional strategies and policy responses aimed at protecting and sustaining DEIB initiatives amid ongoing legislative challenges.

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Type: Business Meeting

Officer: Lori Delale-O’Connor

Time: Thursday, April 9, 6:15–7:15pm PDT (9:15–10:15pm EDT)

Location: Westin Bonaventure, Floor: Lobby Level, Santa Barbara A

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Type: Business Meeting

Chairs: Phillandra Samantha Smith (University of Pittsburgh); Kathleen M. Collins (Pennsylvania State University)

Time: Thursday, April 9, 6:15–7:15pm PDT (9:15–10:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Room 511AB

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Type: Business Meeting

Chairs: Shannon Wanless (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Thursday, April 9, 6:15–8:00pm PDT (9:15–11:00pm EDT)

Location: Westin Bonaventure, Floor: Level 2, Mt. Washington

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Friday, April 10

Type: Poster Session

Authors: Raquel Coelho, Cassandra Kelley, and Junyu Liu (University of Pittsburgh); Kristin Børte (University of Bergen)

Time: Friday, April 10, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Poster Hall – Exhibit Hall A (Poster 46)

Description: This paper presents preliminary findings from a scoping review of precollege quantum information science (QIS) education, addressing limitations of prior reviews, particularly in terms of scope and methodological rigor. Adopting a learning sciences lens, we examine the extent to which proposed QIS education interventions articulate their underlying design rationales—the theorized connections between design features, the learning processes they aim to support, and the intended outcomes, grounded in learning theory and prior research. A systematic search across three databases identified 41 articles published between 2012 and 2025 that met the criteria for inclusion. Preliminary findings suggest that many interventions give limited attention to design rationale, which constrains both theoretical advancement and practical application.

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Type: e-Lightning Ed-Talk Session

Authors: Raquel Coelho, Cassandra Kelley, and Junyu Liu (University of Pittsburgh); Kristin Børte (University of Bergen)

Time: Friday, April 10, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Exhibit Hall A – Stage 2

Description: This paper presents preliminary findings from a scoping review of precollege quantum information science (QIS) education, addressing limitations of prior reviews, particularly in terms of scope and methodological rigor. Adopting a learning sciences lens, we examine the extent to which proposed QIS education interventions articulate their underlying design rationales—the theorized connections between design features, the learning processes they aim to support, and the intended outcomes, grounded in learning theory and prior research. A systematic search across three databases identified 41 articles published between 2012 and 2025 that met the criteria for inclusion. Preliminary findings suggest that many interventions give limited attention to design rationale, which constrains both theoretical advancement and practical application.

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Type: Paper Session on Foundations for Lasting Equity and Transformation: Policy, Organization, and Professional Practice

Authors: Rosa M. Acevedo, Baili Park, and Heather N. McCambly (University of Pittsburgh); Román Liera (Montclair State University); Aireale J. Rodgers (University of Wisconsin – Madison)

Time: Friday, April 10, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 2nd Floor, Platinum D

Description: We examined how departments can utilize faculty cluster hiring initiatives to develop and implement selection and evaluation criteria that align with broader university missions and values, while centering on the experiences and expertise of Faculty of Color.

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Type: Paper Session on Global Perspectives on Preparation for Diversity: Enacting Anti-Bias Pedagogies for Transformative Multicultural Education

Authors: Sarah Anne Eckert (Eastern University); Miriam Marguerita Gomez Witmer (Millersville University of Pennsylvania); Jill May Swavely (Temple University); Luca Poxon (Temple University); Michelle J. Sobolak (University of Pittsburgh); Beth R. Sockman (East Stroudsburg University of Pennsylvania)

Time: Friday, April 10, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 4th Floor, Diamond 9

Description: This paper reports on one component of a mixed-methods research project evaluating the intentional implementation of the Pennsylvania Culturally Relevant and Sustaining Education (CRSE) Competencies in teacher education programs. Specifically, we examine how teacher education students at five universities describe the impact of coursework substantially revised to incorporate the CRSE Competencies in shaping their perceptions of the Competencies, their evolving understanding of personal identity, and their views on student identities and lived experiences. We found that candidates not only reported the courses successfully shaped their perspectives of CRSE, but also, using Self-Determination Theory (Ryan & Deci, 2017), pointed to specific course experiences that helped them develop CRSE-based teacher identities and understand their students’ identities.

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Type: Roundtable Session

Chair:  Jessica McCormick (University of Pittsburgh – Greensburg)

Time: Friday, April 10, 9:45–11:15am PDT (12:45–2:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: Gold Level, Gold 3, Table 8

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Type: Paper Session

Author: Sierra Stern (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Friday, April 10, 11:45am–1:15pm PDT (2:45–4:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 4th Floor, Diamond 10

Description: Despite serving a fundamental role in education ecosystems, State Education Agencies (SEAs) are often underconsidered in education research. In this paper, I systematically review 23 empirical articles published in peer-reviewed journals and use Critical Policy Analysis to explore key functions that SEAs perform and the challenges they navigate. Through this review, I identified the following SEA roles and responsibilities: interpreting policies and identifying educational priorities, monitoring and reporting, and providing ongoing guidance and support to schools and districts across the state. Findings reveal how SEA leaders navigate complex policy environments and exercise agency with limited resources and capacity. These findings have implications for how SEAs can support schools and districts amid increasing sociopolitical turmoil and a changing educational landscape.

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Type: Symposium on Navigating the Politics of Retrenchment in Higher Education: Four Senior Scholars Reflect B(l)ack

Chair and Discussant: Eboni M. Zamani-Gallaher (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Friday, April 10, 11:45am–1:15pm PDT (2:45–4:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 2nd Floor, Platinum H

Description: In this session, four Black higher education senior scholars reflect on Professor Kimberlé Crenshaw’s (1988) article “Race, Reform & Retrenchment: Transformation and Legitimization in Anti-Discrimination Law.” Through politicizing higher education, state and federal governments have created a crisis of retrenchment from racial equity through the dismantling of diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives and positions; attacks on critical race theory; and undermining academic freedom through cutting academic programs (e.g. Black studies, Women, Gender, & Sexuality Studies; Queer Studies). The policies used to rid higher education of these reforms are masked as efforts to promote equality and meritocracy. However, the opposite has occurred and resulted in the retrenchment of several gains realized by student and community political activism over the last 70 years.

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Type: Luncheon (invitation only)

Participant: Lauren B. Resnick (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Friday, April 10, 11:45am–1:15pm PDT (2:45–4:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Room 309

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Type: Paper Session on the Architecture of Education Governance: Institutions, Leadership, and Influence

Author: Hannah Goldstein, and Hayley Ryan Weddle (University of Pittsburgh); Megan Hopkins (University of California – San Diego)

Time: Friday, April 10, 11:45am–1:15pm PDT (2:45–4:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 4th Floor, Diamond 10

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Type: Poster Session

  • Linking Housing Quality Concerns and Toddler Inhibitory Control: The Mediating Role of Household Disorganization (Poster 35) — Nathaniel Philip Pettit, Jazelle Pilato, Elizabeth Votruba-Drzal, Melissa Libertus, and Heather J. Bachman (University of Pittsburgh)
  • The Role of Spatial Activity Engagement in Early Spatial Development: Examining Gender Differences during Preschool (Poster 41) — Joei Angelina Camarote, Jazelle A Pilato, Melissa Libertus, Elizabeth Votruba-Drzal, and Heather J. Bachman, (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Friday, April 10, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Poster Hall – Exhibit Hall A

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Type: e-Lightning Ed-Talk Session

Authors: Joei Angelina Camarote, Jazelle A Pilato, Melissa Libertus, Elizabeth Votruba-Drzal, and Heather J. Bachman (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Friday, April 10, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Exhibit Hall A – Stage 2

Description: This study examines how preschool children’s engagement in spatial activities at home relates to growth in spatial skills and whether these associations differ by gender. Using multi-method data from 262 parent-child dyads, we measured frequency, duration, and diversity of spatial activities, as well as mental rotation and spatial perception skills at ages four and five. Structural equation modeling showed that spatial engagement predicted growth in spatial perception but not mental rotation. No statistically significant gender moderation emerged. Findings highlight the importance of early home experiences in supporting foundational spatial skills linked to later STEM success. Results suggest everyday activities like block play and puzzles can foster spatial reasoning similarly for boys and girls.

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Type: Roundtable Session

Authors: Phillandra Samantha Smith (University of Pittsburgh); Jaleah N Robinson (Duquesne University)

Time: Friday, April 10, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: Gold Level, Gold 3

Description: In The Bahamas, public school teachers often educate students with diverse academic and behavioral needs without formal special or inclusive education systems or training. Limited healthcare and educational resources leave many disabilities undiagnosed, placing additional demands on teachers. Using decoloniality as a framework, this qualitative study draws on interviews with ten Bahamian teachers to explore how they support students in these conditions. Findings highlight how educators rely on local and community knowledge to nurture students’ academic, emotional, spiritual, and physical well-being. The study underscores the value of indigenous pedagogies and urges education stakeholders in the global south to resist adopting U.S. models uncritically, instead embracing culturally grounded approaches to inclusive education.

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Type: Paper Session on Democracy and Education: Authoritarianism, Resistance, and Racial Justice

Discussant: Christian Sundquist (University of Pittsburgh)

Author: Christian Sundquist (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Friday, April 10, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 2nd Floor, Platinum E

Description: This paper explores the constitutional right to protest as a foundational but increasingly imperiled component of democratic life, particularly in response to racial injustice. Drawing on abolition constitutionalism and critical race theory, the paper critiques how current legal doctrines revert to a proslavery, originalist interpretation of constitutional rights, undermining protections for protest and political dissent.

The discussion engages with the Reconstruction Amendments to argue for a reimagined, abolitionist understanding of expressive and associational freedoms—particularly relevant for students, educators, and communities engaged in racial justice organizing. As educational institutions become flashpoints for protest and state surveillance, this work highlights the legal and policy frameworks that shape what kinds of dissent are tolerated or punished in educational settings. In doing so, the paper bridges constitutional law with education policy to argue for a more expansive, justice-oriented conception of democratic participation.

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Type: Paper Session on advancing socioculturally inclusive theory, research, and practice in student engagement

Authors: James P. Huguley (University of Pittsburgh); Christina Scanlon and Ming-Te Wang (University of Chicago)

Time: Friday, April 10, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: Westin Bonaventure, Floor: Level 3, Hollywood Ballroom

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Type: Roundtable Session

Author: Mohammed Alsuwaylih (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Friday, April 10, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Petree Hall C

Description: Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 encourages family engagement and co-financing in education, yet little is known about whether private spending increases student learning and academic achievement. Drawing on the 2022 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) for Saudi Arabia (N ≈ 6,900), this study estimates the association between three family investments through, out-of-pocket educational spending, early-childhood education (ECE) participation, and paid mathematics tutoring, and 15-year-olds’ mathematics achievement. We fit sequential regression models that use PISA’s ten plausible values and 80 balanced-replication weights. Controls include household income, gender, school type, and teaching quality. We expect investments to remain positively associated with achievement after controls, which provides new evidence for Saudi and regional education equity debates.

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Type: Paper Session on bridging research and practice in educational contexts

Titles:

  • Dialogue Matters: The Effects of Feedback Dialogue and Dialogue Modality on Peer Feedback Quality and Uptake — Christian D. Schunn (University of Pittsburgh); Yuhuan Emma Zhao and Fuhui Zhang (Northeast Normal University)
  • How Students Perceive and Respond to GenAI for Peer Feedback Uptake — Christian D. Schunn (University of Pittsburgh); and others

Time: Friday, April 10, 3:45–5:15pm PDT (6:45–8:15pm EDT)

Location: Westin Bonaventure, Floor: Level 3, Avalon

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Type: Roundtable Session on Teaching and Mixed Methods Research

Authors: Brett Ranon Nachman (University of Pittsburgh) [not in attendance]; Bradley E. Cox, Karly Ball Isaacson, Yilun Jiang, and Rebecca Brower (Michigan State University)

Time: Friday, April 10, 7:45–8:45pm PDT (10:45–11:45pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: Ground Floor, Gold 4

Description: This paper introduces proposition testing, a structured, team-based method for achieving iterative integration that yields robust conclusions in mixed methods research. In contrast to common approaches that present qualitative and quantitative data in parallel, proposition testing fosters sustained dialogue between strands to refine interpretive claims. Drawing on grounded theory, multiple case study, and constant comparison, the process involves generating, challenging, and revising propositions across multiple rounds of analysis. We illustrate the method’s application across several empirical studies, including traditional and less conventional mixed methods designs. By promoting analytic rigor, transparency, and collaboration, proposition testing offers a practical strategy for enhancing integration and maximizing the contributions of diverse data sources in addressing complex research questions.

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Type: Business Meeting

Office: Veena Vasudevan (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Friday, April 10, 7:45–8:45pm PDT (10:45–11:45pm EDT)

Location:  JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 4th Floor, Diamond 10

Description: A joint business and networking meeting with the Writing and Literacies SIG and the Media Culture and Learning SIG. An interactive dialogue with a panel of critical scholars guiding us to work toward just educational futures through partnerships in these precarious times.

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Saturday, April 11

Type: Roundtable Session

Authors: Maria Jose Anderson-Coto (UC Irvine); Alejandra Gallegos (Santa Ana Early Learning Initiative); Wendy Giovanna Gomez (Santa Ana Early Learning Initiative); Kevin Crowley (University of Pittsburgh); Andres Sebastian Bustamante (University of California – Irvine); Diana Leyva (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Petree D

Description: This paper examines how Latine families use storytelling and food routines to reimagine everyday learning. Through community-based participatory design with multigenerational families, we explore how caregivers activate resistance, navigational, and aspirational capital to transform culturally rooted practices into educational futures grounded in agency, connection, and care. Drawing on three themes, we highlight how families share personal histories and intergenerational memories as a generative design and resistance tool through which they mobilize emotionally layered practices like cooking to design new educational futures. This work contributes to scholarship by showing how everyday cultural practices, when intentionally engaged, can serve as design materials for learning environments centered on community agency and self-determination.

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Type: Paper Session on Narratives of Black Educational Renewal

Author: Ogechi Irondi (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 9:45–11:15am PDT (12:45–2:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 2nd Floor, Platinum G

Description: Although immigration from African countries to the U.S. continues to rise (Tamir & Anderson, 2022), the educational experiences of African immigrant girls remain underexplored. This qualitative study examines how second-generation West African girls navigate schooling at the intersection of race, ethnicity, and gender (Crenshaw, 1991), and within their layered social contexts (Phelan et al., 1991). Drawing on focus groups and interviews with girls and their parents, we explore how this population makes sense of their identities and relationships across home, school, and peer spaces. Findings highlight intergenerational tensions between immigrant parents and their children, which shape girls’ educational engagement and aspirations. We conclude with implications for educators and policymakers committed to advancing equity for students from immigrant backgrounds.

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Type: Symposium on unforgetting patriarchy in mathematics education research

Author: Shanyce L. Campbell (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 9:45–11:15am PDT (12:45–2:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: 2nd Floor, Platinum A

Description: This symposium is about mathematics education research that unforgets patriarchy in the study of women and gender. Building on calls for mathematics education research to expand its approach to gender (e.g., Hall & Norén, 2021), the symposium examines the limits and reach of patriarchy as an analytic lens on what frees or constrains the lives and learning of students. Each paper represents a reanalysis of previously published work to illustrate what this analytic lens can contribute (and foreclose on) in advancing equity. Aligned with the conference theme of looking back to imagine forward, this symposium speaks to the symbolic and material conditions of mathematics education (research) in building and fortifying a multiracial and gender diverse society for generations to come.

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Type: Paper Session

Authors: Amy Hartman (University of Pittsburgh); Shalini Sivathasan, Chang Gu, and Samantha Martin (Boston College)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 11:45am–1:15pm PDT (2:45–4:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Room 301A

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Type: Roundtable Session

Author: Ashlyn Salvage (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 11:45am–1:15pm PDT (2:45–4:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Petree D

Description: This study investigates how staff in creative learning organizations (CLOs) make sense of and enact racial equity through their identities and frames. CLOs—particularly those led by and for communities of color—serve as critical yet understudied spaces of resistance and imagination. This comparative case study analyzes how identities shape staff understandings of equity and their capacity for racialized changework. Findings show that staff ground their work and equity commitments in personal and social aspects of identity such as race or gender. By centering micro-level dynamics of identity and framing, this paper highlights how individual sensemaking can either constrain or enable organizational transformation. It contributes to research on racialized organizations and educational change in informal learning contexts.

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Type: Paper Session on strengthening minority-serving institutions in a shifting landscape

Discussant: Marialexia Zaragoza (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 11:45am–1:15pm PDT (2:45–4:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Room 502A

Description: This townhall session will bring together institutional leaders and scholars to discuss the impact of current federal actions on Minority-Serving Institutions (MSIs). These institutions have dealt with the cancellation and reallocation of grants, continued scrutiny of their federal designations, and the impact of other policies in higher education. These actions will have a lasting impact on staff, faculty, students, and communities where these institutions are located. In this townhall, we will include perspectives from a diverse group of institutional leaders, administrators and practitioners from MSI community colleges and universities, faculty perspectives, and from scholars who study multiple-designated MSIs. This session will not just be focused on the current impact of policies, but also to chart the future direction of MSIs that prioritizes coalition-building among the various types of MSIs.

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Type: Poster Session on the outcomes of research-practice partnerships

Titles:

  • Sustaining a Research-Practice Partnership with State Leaders (Poster 1) — Hayley Ryan Weddle (University of Pittsburgh); Megan Hopkins (University of California – San Diego)
  • Making Improvement Continuous: How Network Hub Leaders Plan for the Sustained Impact of Educational Improvement Networks (Poster 9) — Jennifer Zoltners Sherer (University of Pittsburgh); Megan Duff (UNC Chapel Hill); Jennifer Lin Russell (Vanderbilt University); Chris Matthis (Partners for Network Improvement)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Room 515B

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Type: Roundtable Session

Author: Katherine M Shanahan (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Petree Hall C

Description: “Grow Your Own” (GYO) teacher pipeline initiatives have gained popularity as a means to address teacher shortages, recruit a diverse pool of teacher candidates, and retain local educators committed to their community. State-specific GYO policies and funding drive implementation and shape efforts to bolster the teacher workforce. My research explores how and to what extent states leverage GYO policies to support training and certification for teachers of multilingual learners (MLs), given the persistent educational inequities ML students often experience. Using a critical policy analysis framework, my analysis focuses on five states to examine how ML teacher policies are framed, situated, and emphasized in broader GYO initiatives, as well as actors involved in oversight of GYO policies within a state.

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Type: Invited Roundtable Session on adaptability and scalability in education justice work

Author: Shannon B. Wanless (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Room 408A (Table 4)

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Type: Paper Session on situating growth mindset across contexts and cultures

Authors: Tetsuya Yamada and Xu Qin (University of Pittsburgh); Christina Scanlon and Ming-Te Wang (University of Chicago)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: Westin Bonaventure, Floor: Lobby Level, Beaudry A

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Type: Paper Session on critical theories of children’s museums

Author: Ashlyn Salvage (University of Pittsburgh)

Chair and Discussant: Alecia Dawn Young (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 3:45–5:15pm PDT (6:45–8:15pm EDT)

Location: Westin Bonaventure, Floor: Lobby Level, Santa Anita B

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Type: Roundtable Session

Authors: Stephen Walker (University of Pittsburgh); Marlene N. Fares (Kutztown University of Pennsylvania)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 3:45–5:15pm PDT (6:45–8:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: Ground Floor, Gold 4

Description: The return of Clipse is not just a musical event; it’s a cultural statement, steeped in theological weight, entrepreneurial precision, and lyrical mastery. To understand its significance, we must analyze it through three intersecting lenses: Hip-Hop praxis, entrepreneurial strategy, and narrative sovereignty. This paper explores Let God Sort Em Out, the 2025 album by Clipse, as a culturally urgent case study in Hip-Hop praxis, entrepreneurial strategy, and narrative sovereignty. Reuniting after more than a decade, Clipse delivers not just music, but a multidimensional act of reclamation. In a political moment where Black cultural expression faces systemic silencing through curriculum bans, corporate sanitization, and digital manipulation, Clipse reasserts the right to own their story, their sound, and their business model.

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Type: Paper Session on research findings and reflections from the NSI initiative

Authors: Jennifer Zoltners Sherer (University of Pittsburgh); Donald J. Peurach (University of Michigan); Megan Duff (UNC Chapel Hill); Chris Matthis (Partners for Network Improvement)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 3:45–5:15pm PDT (6:45–8:15pm EDT)

Location: Westin Bonaventure, Floor: Lobby Level, San Gabriel A

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Type: Invited roundtable on conversations with senior scholars on advancing research and professional development related to Black education

Authors: Eboni M. Zamani-Gallaher (University of Pittsburgh); Vivian L. Gadsden (University of Pennsylvania); Darris Roshawn Means (Clemson University)

Time: Saturday, April 11, 3:45–5:15pm PDT (6:45–8:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Petree Hall C (Table 15)

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Sunday, April 12

Type: Closed Meeting

Participant: Lori Delale-O’Connor (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Sunday, April 12, 7:00–9:15am PDT (10:00am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Room 518

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Type: Poster Session on educating for climate literacy and justice

Author: Jennifer Ponce-Cori

Time: Sunday, April 12, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Poster Hall – Exhibit Hall A (Poster 22)

Description: This case analyzes how community leaders navigate environmental challenges at the neighborhood level while retransforming their territory in the defense of the green spaces of Simón Bolívar I, an urban peripheral neighborhood of San Juan de Lurigancho (Lima, Peru), between 2019 and 2024. Through a photovoice method, the central question is “How do community leaders portray and reflect on their own stories about the importance of their green spaces?” Thus, this photovoice study dialogues with Haesbaert’s idea of reterritorialization (territorial reconstruction) to see how community leaders have actively re-transformed their territory in the defense of the green spaces of Simón Bolívar I, and aims to reflect on community actions in conserving and protecting green spaces at the local level.

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Type: Poster Session on equitable participation and discourse in science teaching and learning

Authors: Audrey Buzard, Dustin Dusang, Nathan Cho, Cassie F. Quigley, Abigail Matela, Colton Siakowski, and Vaughn Cooper (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Sunday, April 12, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Poster Hall – Exhibit Hall A (Poster 38)

Description: This study reflects the progress made during the second year of a five-year research project. It examines the effects of the EvolvingSTEM curriculum on middle and high school students’ STEM occupational identity, with a focus on how authentic learning experiences shape self-concept and self-efficacy. Using mixed-methods analysis, the findings highlight the complex impacts of the curriculum. Quantitative results show significant gains in self-concept post-intervention, while qualitative data reveal both positive influences and persistent barriers related to self-concept, self-efficacy, and belonging. By demonstrating the power of active learning and culturally relevant content, this research supports pedagogical strategies that increase STEM engagement and reduce gaps in the STEM workforce. It also advances discussions on integrating quantitative and qualitative methods in theory development.

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Type: e-Lightning Ed-Talk Session

Chair: Audrey Buzard, Dustin Dusang, Nathan Cho, Cassie F. Quigley, Abigail Matela, Colton Siakowski, and Vaughn Cooper (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Sunday, April 12, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Exhibit Hall A – Stage 2

Description: This study reflects the progress made during the second year of a five-year research project. It examines the effects of the EvolvingSTEM curriculum on middle and high school students’ STEM occupational identity, with a focus on how authentic learning experiences shape self-concept and self-efficacy. Using mixed-methods analysis, the findings highlight the complex impacts of the curriculum. Quantitative results show significant gains in self-concept post-intervention, while qualitative data reveal both positive influences and persistent barriers related to self-concept, self-efficacy, and belonging. By demonstrating the power of active learning and culturally relevant content, this research supports pedagogical strategies that increase STEM engagement and reduce gaps in the STEM workforce. It also advances discussions on integrating quantitative and qualitative methods in theory development.

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Type: Roundtable Session on constructing new understandings of learning in mathematics and science education

Author: Mahati Kopparla (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Sunday, April 12, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE, Floor: Ground Floor, Gold 2

Description: Dominant narratives of mathematics as objective knowledge along with local educational standards restrict the kind of mathematics being taught at the school and the pedagogies employed. Building on critical mathematics education scholarship, this work recognizes the socio-political nature of mathematics. This presentation will share observations from a secondary mathematics methods course to illustrate the tensions faced by the preservice teachers while designing their lessons. Particularly, I demonstrate a contrast in their teaching approach by comparing two lesson plans designed by them during the span of the course – a procedural lesson for their ongoing student placement; and another lesson designed for a hypothetical classroom that blurs the disciplinary boundaries of mathematics to attend to complex socio-political issues.

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Type: Roundtable Session on challenges and opportunities to facilitating improvement

Authors: Jennifer Zoltners Sherer (University of Pittsburgh); Angel Yee-lam Li and Anthony S. Bryk (Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching)

Time: Sunday, April 12, 7:45–9:15am PDT (10:45am–12:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level One, Petree D

Description: As organizations that are typically temporary, improvement networks are particularly susceptible to time-related challenges. This study examines how time can impede the progress of schools participating in such networks, drawing on data collected through a qualitative survey approach. Our analysis reveals that time-related challenges manifest in various forms and stem from a range of underlying causes. Furthermore, we found that the degree to which time serves as a barrier varies across networks, suggesting that some are more adept at mitigating these challenges than others. The strategies employed by these networks may inform best practices for conducting impactful networked improvement work.

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Type: Poster Session

Discussants: Blayne D. Stone (University of Pittsburgh); Kenyon Lee Whitman (University of Nevada – Las Vegas)

Time: Sunday, April 12, 9:45–11:15am PDT (12:45–2:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Poster Hall – Exhibit Hall A (Poster 47)

Description: Individuals and institutions have historically developed, and continue to maintain, both conscious and unconscious biases toward students with experience in the foster care system. Projected stereotypes and prejudices significantly influence how students with experience in foster care (SEFC) are treated, particularly within educational settings. These generalized perceptions often lead to mistreatment, marginalization, and systemic neglect, further harming a population that is already in critical need of support and resources. This manuscript coined the term fosterphobia to describe how educational and societal institutions at-large stigmatize, marginalize, and dehumanize SEFC.

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Type: Paper Session on learning environments and academic growth in diverse contexts

Authors: Jazelle Pilato, Nandini Rastogi, Joei Angelina Camarote, Nathaniel Philip Pettit, Elizabeth Votruba-Drzal, Melissa Libertus, and Heather J. Bachman (University of Pittsburgh)

Time: Sunday, April 12, 9:45–11:15am PDT (12:45–2:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Room 304A

Description: Early math skills are important predictors of later academic success, but how parent math skills and math affect influence preschoolers’ numeracy and spatial skills remains unclear. This study examined contributions of parent math skills and affect to preschoolers’ math development using data from 273 parent–child dyads followed from ages 4 to 5. At age 4, parents completed questionnaires about affect and standardized assessments. Children were administered numeracy and spatial tasks at ages 4 and 5. Controlling for prior math ability and demographic covariates, parent math skills significantly predicted children’s numeracy and spatial skills at age 5. Parent affect was not significantly associated with child skills. Results highlight intergenerational skill transmission and the importance of supporting parent math competence.

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Type: Poster Session

Authors: Christian D. Schunn (University of Pittsburgh); Jie Cao (University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill); Shuman Wang (Stanford University)

Time: Sunday, April 12, 11:45am–1:15pm PDT (2:45–4:15pm EDT)

Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Floor: Level Two, Poster Hall – Exhibit Hall A (Poster 39)

Description: There is a lack of understanding of how teachers engage with generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) for learning task design and the nuanced challenges inherent in such collaboration. Therefore, this mixed-methods study involved 28 in-service teachers collaborating with GenAI tools to design learning tasks over three weeks. Results identified teacher-side challenges (insufficient input of context information, insufficient pedagogical guidance, and insufficient skills with GenAI), GenAI-side challenges (accuracy issues, limited prompt understanding, limited instructional arcs, insufficient knowledge of context, incomplete instructional solutions, and usability issues), as well as four overall interaction challenges (inefficient interaction, limited quality, lack of distributed cognition, negative human-GenAI loops). This study provides empirical evidence of challenges and a framework for enhancing effective teacher-GenAI collaboration.

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Type: Symposium examining power in educational organizations

Authors: Joshua Bleiberg and Ai Shao (University of Pittsburgh); Nell Williams (EdFund)

Time: Sunday, April 12, 1:45–3:15pm PDT (4:45–6:15pm EDT)

Location: Westin Bonaventure, Floor: Lobby Level, Los Cerritos

Description:

Court-ordered school finance reforms (SFRs) can play an important role in creating more robust, adequate, and equitable education funding systems (Candelaria, McNeill, & Shores, 2022). However, the responsibility of adhering to these rulings lies in the hands of state legislatures, giving them expansive power to shape educational outcomes through funding allocation. We seek to better understand the pathway from court order to finance reform by studying how state legislators think about and act on SFR rulings. Our study uses the case of Pennsylvania to consider 1) how funding provisions change after a ruling, 2) which districts tend to benefit from SFR and why, and 3) how political concerns mediate resulting funding allocations.

In 2023, Pennsylvania’s Commonwealth Court issued a landmark ruling finding the state’s education funding formula unconstitutional. Pennsylvania’s school finance system has led to some of the most pronounced funding inequities in the nation; however, it is one of the higher- spending states in the country, meaning it has ample funds to reallocate in service of funding and resource equity (Blagg, Gutierrez, & Terrones, 2022; Farrie & Sciarra, 2022).

In this case study, we use document analysis and interviews to explore the political and power dynamics involved in implementing Pennsylvania’s SFR. Our document analysis includes more than 43 pieces of media from newspapers and radio stations that discuss the Pennsylvania State Assembly’s response to this ruling. We reviewed these documents with an eye toward the issues politicians consider when undertaking a major revision to education funding and how these issues interact with partisan objectives. Also, we conducted interviews with 14 key actors and stakeholders about education budget negotiations. We sought to elicit participants’ views on the court order, priorities for funding allocation under the court order, changes in their views and expectations during litigation and legislative negotiations, and considerations of partisan objectives. Interviewees included policymakers and staffers in the General Assembly, members of the Basic Education Funding Commission, and superintendents.

Our analysis of traditional media reveals distinct partisan framing around Pennsylvania’s court-ordered school funding reform. Democratic legislators cited values of equity and fair opportunity while Republican legislators cited concerns about whether additional funding would yield commensurate results and expressed ideological opposition to certain provisions raised during negotiations. For instance, some Republicans framed provisions such as free feminine hygiene products in schools as overreach. Our interviews found that policymakers were cautiously optimistic that bipartisan support for funding increases would continue. One state representative and former school board member described that their initial relief at the court’s decision quickly shifted to focus on the potential challenges of implementing the seven-year plan. These findings suggest that while there is broad support for reform, ideological differences will shape how Pennsylvania SFR moves forward.

We show some of the ways that school funding negotiations are shaped by legislators’ ideological and party positions, and how tenuous consensus can be given changing political priorities. These findings shed light on ways that power and politics shape education finance reform.

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University of Pittsburgh Participants

Mohammed Alsuwaylih
Heather J. Bachman
Joshua Bleiberg
Audrey Buzard
Shanyce L. Campbell
Joei Angelina Camarote
Nathan Cho
Kevin Crowley
Amanda Brown Cross
Linda DeAngelo
Lori Delale-O’Connor
Charlie Díaz
Dustin Dusang
Sergio A. Gonzalez
Hannah Goldstein
Courtney Grondziowski
Amy Hartman
James P. Huguley

Ogechi Irondi
Mahati Kopparla
Diana Leyva
Melissa Libertus
Junyu Liu
Cassandra Kelley
Heather N. McCambly
Abigail Matela
Brett Ranon Nachman
Baili Park
Nathaniel Philip Pettit
Jazelle Pilato
Jennifer Ponce-Cori
Cassie F. Quigley
Raquel Coelho
Lauren B. Resnick
Nandini Rastogi
Ashlyn Salvage
Katherine M Shanahan

Ai Shao
Colton Siakowski
Christian D. Schunn
Phillandra Samantha Smith
Michelle J. Sobolak
Sierra Stern
Blayne D. Stone
Christian Sundquist
Veena Vasudevan
Elizabeth Votruba-Drzal
Stephen Walker
Shannon B. Wanless
Hayley Ryan Weddle
Tetsuya Yamada
Alecia Dawn Young
Eboni M. Zamani-Gallaher
Marialexia Zaragoza
Jennifer Zoltners Sherer
Xu Qin

Questions?

To update your information on this page, please contact Greg Latshaw at glatshaw@pitt.edu or Junior Gonzalez at jeg331@pitt.edu.

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