A Narrative Inquiry of Charter School Social Work and the “No Excuses” Behavior Model

Neoliberal education reform has resulted in a growing number of charter schools across the country, many of which are concentrated in low-income communities of color (Kahlenberg & Potter, 2014). Charter schools serving these demographics often practice a “no excuses” pedagogy featuring two comp...

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Main Author: Allison Balogh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia University Libraries 2019-06-01
Series:Columbia Social Work Review
Online Access:https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/cswr/article/view/1855
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spelling doaj-113dbd2769d441d6ac82b5bcaf36a65d2020-11-25T02:04:58ZengColumbia University LibrariesColumbia Social Work Review2372-255X2164-12502019-06-01141A Narrative Inquiry of Charter School Social Work and the “No Excuses” Behavior ModelAllison Balogh Neoliberal education reform has resulted in a growing number of charter schools across the country, many of which are concentrated in low-income communities of color (Kahlenberg & Potter, 2014). Charter schools serving these demographics often practice a “no excuses” pedagogy featuring two components: (1) universal, precise behavioral expectations and (2) systematic rewards for compliance and penalties for disobedience (Golan, 2015; Goodman, 2013; Whitman, 2008). This article examines overlooked consequences of the “no excuses” model by presenting a narrative inquiry involving 3 social workers from charter schools in Harlem, New York. Individual, semi-structured interviews were conducted about professional background, roles and responsibilities, the school community, and the political context of charter schools. The collective narrative that emerged from this framework describes how participants have met their concern that a “no excuses” model creates traumatic or unsupportive environments for marginalized students with evidence-based advocacy. This article serves to foster the community of charter school social workers who wish to critique the “no excuses” model within their schools and on a broader scale. https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/cswr/article/view/1855
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Allison Balogh
spellingShingle Allison Balogh
A Narrative Inquiry of Charter School Social Work and the “No Excuses” Behavior Model
Columbia Social Work Review
author_facet Allison Balogh
author_sort Allison Balogh
title A Narrative Inquiry of Charter School Social Work and the “No Excuses” Behavior Model
title_short A Narrative Inquiry of Charter School Social Work and the “No Excuses” Behavior Model
title_full A Narrative Inquiry of Charter School Social Work and the “No Excuses” Behavior Model
title_fullStr A Narrative Inquiry of Charter School Social Work and the “No Excuses” Behavior Model
title_full_unstemmed A Narrative Inquiry of Charter School Social Work and the “No Excuses” Behavior Model
title_sort narrative inquiry of charter school social work and the “no excuses” behavior model
publisher Columbia University Libraries
series Columbia Social Work Review
issn 2372-255X
2164-1250
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Neoliberal education reform has resulted in a growing number of charter schools across the country, many of which are concentrated in low-income communities of color (Kahlenberg & Potter, 2014). Charter schools serving these demographics often practice a “no excuses” pedagogy featuring two components: (1) universal, precise behavioral expectations and (2) systematic rewards for compliance and penalties for disobedience (Golan, 2015; Goodman, 2013; Whitman, 2008). This article examines overlooked consequences of the “no excuses” model by presenting a narrative inquiry involving 3 social workers from charter schools in Harlem, New York. Individual, semi-structured interviews were conducted about professional background, roles and responsibilities, the school community, and the political context of charter schools. The collective narrative that emerged from this framework describes how participants have met their concern that a “no excuses” model creates traumatic or unsupportive environments for marginalized students with evidence-based advocacy. This article serves to foster the community of charter school social workers who wish to critique the “no excuses” model within their schools and on a broader scale.
url https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/cswr/article/view/1855
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