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Koyama, Jill; Kasper, Julie – Educational Administration Quarterly, 2021
Purpose: In this study, we trace the work of refugee student-family mentors (mentors) in an Arizona school district who work across school-family boundaries. Utilizing boundary spanning theory, we examine how education leaders--teachers, school principals, assistant principals, and district administrators--work with the mentors. We document the…
Descriptors: Mentors, Refugees, Family School Relationship, Parent School Relationship
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Koyama, Jill; Bakuza, Fortidas Rwehumbiza – Journal of Educational Change, 2017
Refugee youth attend schools in every state in the United States. Yet, little is known about their schooling experiences or the ways in which schools engage their parents. In this paper, we resituate notions of parent involvement by focusing on the interactions between refugee parents and U.S. schools drawing on data collected during a twenty-six…
Descriptors: Refugees, Parent Participation, Ethnography, Educational Change
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Koyama, Jill – European Educational Research Journal, 2021
Public education in the United States acts as a governmental tool of neoliberalism, through which state power and sovereignty are deployed and transformed in daily life. Here, I examine how the divergence of sovereignty is exerted over refugee students and their families in US public education. Drawing on 42 months of ethnographic data collected…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Refugees, Ethnography, Immigrants
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Koyama, Jill; Chang, Ethan – Educational Policy, 2019
Despite the central role schools have played in the resettlement of refugees, we know little about how principals, teachers, parents, and staff at community-based organizations interpret and negotiate national immigration policy and state education policies. Combing critical discourse analysis (CDA) and actor-network theory (ANT), we capture how…
Descriptors: Refugees, School Role, Immigration, State Policy
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Koyama, Jill – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2015
This article focuses on the enactment of No Child Left Behind (NCLB), the USA's broad sweeping federal education policy, in a persistently low-achieving school in which the majority of students are refugees and immigrants. Drawing on a 26-month ethnography, I reveal the ways in which a NCLB-guided school turnaround plan is enacted variably,…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Legislation, Federal Legislation, Public Schools
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Koyama, Jill – Policy Futures in Education, 2015
Refugees in the US are often seen as risk-takers--those who engage in potentially harmful behaviors that simultaneously provide opportunity; with their perceived weaknesses in English language training, overall education, and US cultural capital, refugees are also frequently situated as being "at-risk" of not adapting to their new…
Descriptors: Refugees, English Language Learners, At Risk Persons, Cultural Capital
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Koyama, Jill – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2013
The global movement of people alters our understandings of social mobility. Here, I draw on ethnographic data collected since January 2011 and utilize the notion of "assemblage" to document and analyze how disparate people, their material objects, and discursive practices are brought together to render refugees as educable, productive,…
Descriptors: Refugees, Social Mobility, Land Settlement, Ethnography