Street Data: A Next-Generation Model for Equity, Pedagogy, and School Transformation
Street Data: A Next-Generation Model for Equity, Pedagogy, and School Transformation book cover

Street Data: A Next-Generation Model for Equity, Pedagogy, and School Transformation

Price
$34.15
Format
Paperback
Pages
282
Publisher
Corwin
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1071812716
Dimensions
7 x 0.64 x 10 inches
Weight
1.19 pounds

Description

" Street Data calls upon readers to ′flip the dashboard′ from a focus on big data to a focus on the voices at the margins – those learners and their families who have been most affected by deep-rooted systemic inequities.xa0 When we listen closely to these voices with curiosity, courage, and humility, we gain a greater understanding of the meaning and root causes of these inequities, as well as how they can be addressed in ways that transform and heal. Policymakers and educators at every level of the system need this book to forge a path to genuine equity." -- Linda Darling-Hammond Published On: 2020-10-12 "For far too long, education leaders have implemented reform strategies without engaging and centering those most impacted – the students. Shane Safir provides an energizing, anti-racist, actionable framework that centers the voices of the most marginalized students as the experts and co-conspirators that we need to create an education system worthy of their brilliance. Read this, share it, and be a part of ushering in this ′new normal′ of street-level data to unlock racial justice in our schools." -- Taryn Ishida, Youth Organizer and Executive Director Published On: 2020-11-03" With Street Data, Shane and Jamila have built a conversation more than a framework, wherein students, their communities, teachers, leaders and systems are interconnected parts of a family unit. As a Professor and Psychologist, I found myself drawn to the work’s human and family centered focus. Throughout the work, these are linked to an emphasis on building approaches to the art of teaching grounded in listening, making and holding room for all members of the learning family, and setting goals and evolving approaches that begin with the student as their core. Shane and Jamila are engaging us all in a critically important conversation, where the data we gather and share around learning spaces is shaped and centered on the voices and beings of students. It is family systems centered teaching and learning. It is holistic, and it is necessary. " -- Napoleon Wells , Ph.D. Published On: 2020-10-06 "Shane Safir and Jamila Dugan have given us a vivid and immensely readable account of what public education could and should be. Rather than quick fixes, the book is rich with real-life examples and immediately actionable equity practices that educators and leaders can use to tackle root causes. The authors have also issued an unspoken but clear challenge to all of us who care about children′s learning and development: ′What if policy decisions were anchored in the lived experiences of students, their families, and their educators?′ Their call to action is clear and urgent: we must reverse-engineer and radically reimagine our resources, policies, and practices to support the broad conditions in which students can authentically thrive, and most particularly students who are the most marginalized by the current system. The vision of educational justice laid out in the book will not be more widely practiced if we simply rely on individual teachers and principals to push forward alone into the headwinds. It must be supported at systems and state levels, so that it becomes the rule and not the exception." -- Sophie Fanelli, President Published On: 2020-11-06 " Street Data issues an urgent, timely provocation to listen to, honor, and be informed by the experiences, wisdom, fears, and aspirations of children and families who have been forced to the margins by our schools and institutions. Rich with stories that affirm our shared humanity and connectedness, Safir and Dugan offer a humanistic approach and practical guidance for embedding love, equity, curiosity, and courage in our efforts to manifest learning spaces where every young person learns, develops, and thrives. "Safir and Dugan call on us to free ourselves from old constructs about data for improvement that are rooted in Whiteness as normative and, instead, model ways to integrate concepts of wholeness, justice, deep culture, personal mastery, and agency into our school transformation efforts. This book is an important contribution to all of us who are working to create a world that works for all of us." -- LaShawn Routé Chatmon, Executive Director Published On: 2020-11-06 "In this absolutely path-breaking book, Shane Safir uses the concept of ′street data′ as an entry point to a fundamentally different paradigm for schooling. Foregrounding listening, understanding, and loving over counting, measuring, and classifying, Street Data illustrates what it would truly mean to develop a humanizing and liberating approach to school transformation. Startlingly fresh in its prose, clear in its convictions, and moving effortlessly between theory and practice, we can only hope Street Data will mark the beginning of a new and different era for American education. A spectacular book!" -- Jal Mehta, Professor of Education Published On: 2020-11-16" Old systems are crumbling before our eyes as new ones are being built. Street Data offers key insights about how to transform data and explore indigenous knowledge creation for a new world. Shane Safir and Jamila Dugan give us new ways to analyze, diagnosis, and assess everything from student learning to district improvement to policy. This book is a must read for researchers and practitioners searching for a fresh and deeply authentic model for school transformation. " -- Shawn Ginwright Published On: 2020-11-23 " Street Data gives us a vibrant picture of what it means to do school when we authentically center our students. Shanexa0and Jamila provide inspiration and clear examples of how we can humanize our classrooms and create a morexa0just education system. Critically forxa0change agents, we also find practical advice for supporting adults across the system as they begin to shift theirxa0approach to a newxa0normal that builds with and for students. Therexa0is no doubt that we need a new way forward and Street Data is a trustedxa0map for charting a course for maximum impact." -- Shanna Peeples Published On: 2020-12-28 Shane Safir has worked at every level of the education system for the past 25 years, with an unwavering commitment to racial justice and deep learning. After teaching in San Francisco and Oakland, California and engaging in community organizing to launch a new public high school, Shane became the founding principal of June Jordan School for Equity (JJSE), an innovative national model identified by scholar and policy leader Linda Darling-Hammond as having “beaten the odds in supporting the success of low-income students of color.” For over a decade, Shane has provided equity-centered leadership coaching, systems transformation support, and professional learning for schools, districts, and organizations across the U.S. and Canada. She writes for Edutopia, Ed Week, Educational Leadership magazine and is the author of The Listening Leader: Creating the Conditions for Equitable School Transformation (Jossey-Bass: 2017). Shane is thrilled to co-author this book with Dr. Jamila Dugan, a long-time collaborator who conducted foundational research for The Listening Leader and facilitates equity workshops with Shane, as well as Carrie Wilson, a colleague whose groundbreaking program for teacher-driven inquiry centers street data in the pursuit of equity. Jamila Dugan is a leadership coach, learning facilitator, and researcher. She began her career as a teacher in Washington D.C., successfully supporting her school to implement an International Baccalaureate program. After being nominated for Teacher of the Year, she later served as a coach for new teachers in Oakland, California. As a school administrator, Jamila championed equity-centered student services, parent empowerment, and co-led the development of the first public Mandarin immersion middle school in the Bay Area. Jamila and Shane began their work together 7 years ago during the development of The Listening Leader for which Jamila acted as the primary researcher. Jamilaxa0 currently serves as an equity-centered leadership development coach across all sectors including non-profits, public school districts, charter networks, parochial, and private schools. She is an avid supporter of dual language learning, serving on the boards of Independence Charter Spanish Immersion School in Philadelphia and Parents of African American Students Studying Chinese (PAASSC) in the Bay Area. She holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology from Fresno State University, a Master’s Degree in Early Childhood Education from George Mason University, and a doctorate in Education Leadership for Equity from University of California, Berkeley. Jamila is also a loving wife and the mother of three amazing children who remain her constant inspiration for her work.

Features & Highlights

  • Radically reimagine our ways of being, learning, and doing
  • Education can be transformed if we eradicate our fixation on big data like standardized test scores as the supreme measure of equity and learning. Instead of the focus being on "fixing" and "filling" academic gaps, we must envision and rebuild the system from the
  • student
  • up―with classrooms, schools and systems built around students’ brilliance, cultural wealth, and intellectual potential. Street data reminds us that what is measurable is not the same as what is valuable and that data can be humanizing, liberatory and healing.
  • By breaking down street data fundamentals: what it is, how to gather it, and how it can complement other forms of data to guide a school or district’s equity journey, Safir and Dugan offer an actionable framework for school transformation. Written for educators and policymakers, this book
  • · Offers fresh ideas and innovative tools to apply immediately
  • · Provides an asset-based model to help educators look for what’s
  • right
  • in our students and communities instead of seeking what’s
  • wrong
  • · Explores a different application of data, from its capacity to help us diagnose root causes of inequity, to its potential to transform learning, and its power to reshape adult culture

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Junk

The authors seem to think that teachers should be telling students how they should feel about whatever the subject at had might be, instead of simply teaching the facts of the subject. A teachers job is to make sure students understand that 2x2 = 4. It's not a teachers job to tell the student how to feel about the fact that 2x2 = 4.
10 people found this helpful
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Tries to justify an irrational, antiscientific, and bigoted worldview

I was shocked by the irrational, anti-scientific diatribes that were made in the epistemology section, and shoot through the book. It makes no attempt to analyze the historical causes of the use of science to justify bigotry, just mentions that it happened, then throws out the baby with the bathwater in terms of the epistemological underpinnings of science. Furthermore it makes no mention of the fact that science is not belief set but a continuous process that self-corrects.

It is racist and disturbing that a philosophy, which on its own has no race, has been attributed to a "white" or "western" worldview. This is demeaning to the Underprivileged for whom science and reason was the source of liberation from bigotry, superstition, and inspires the fight for equality and freedom.

The Book cites pseudo-scientific, bigoted, and right wing efforts, which are rightly condemned, and concludes that Science is the problem! No mention of the fact that it was Science that ultimately helped to undermine bigoted theories. No mention of the fact that Science and Reason are products of the philosophical movement that brought down Aristocrats and Monarchies, which fought for the belief of natural inequality and its own privilege. The philosophy of the Kings and the philosophy of the authors have more in common with each other in their intellectual development than either have to do with the philosophy of science, rationality, or freedom.

In recent years, the postmodern equity industry has itself touted pseudo-science in the form of the implicit bias test, which in several studies with sample sizes in the thousands, repeatedly concluded that so-called "implicit bias" has "no impact on outward behavior". The Implicit Bias test was even denounced as being misused by one of its creators. 

Of course in dealing with humans, children, and people, it is necessary to take into account decency, be tolerant of differences, and actively listen to needs. But this in no way justifies a fundamental shift in epistemology. The teaching of intrinsic difference, is right wing, is not progressive, and will Reify division and difference. Science and Reason have become the backbone of the anti-bigotry that has massive popular support. The forms of anti-bigotry that reject the philosophy of the Enlightenment and Scientific Revolution, have historically, and are presently, being used to undermine the achievements of previous struggles for Equality. The philosophical arguments used to justify the book's ostensible worldview, are indistinguishable in content from the arguments used by Nazis and Neo-Nazis. 

Read "The Seduction of Unreason" by Richard Wolin. It holds a mirror to the worldview and philosophy that defines this book.
6 people found this helpful
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this is the book I am using ALL the time; transformative

Street Data shares a systems-based leadership model and strategies to “walk the talk” of truly transformative school and district transformation. As someone with 25+ years experience in education as a teacher, school building leader, and district leader, this book is the handbook I am going to be referring to often. Safir and Dugan name powerful truths about how we often make decisions without listening to those who are most marginalized in our school systems. This book includes a powerful structure supported with specific practices and examples that avoid a cookie cutter one-size fits all model. Street Data bridges a cohesive equitable school transformation that is both visionary and sustainable. I strongly urge all district and school administrators and teacher leaders to read this book.
6 people found this helpful
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Great flash drive for iphone

This worked great. USB C, lightning, and 3.0. Cab hook to anything
5 people found this helpful
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Thought provoking and shifting my thinking about data use

Street Data is an insightful book that digs deep into the underpinnings of the present systems of aggregating and disaggregating data that perpetuate systems of oppression. I have been in the field of data work in education for 15+ years and this book speaks to leveraging data in a manner that will truly bring about change within education for all students. I have been devouring this book and integrating its principles in my professional learning sessions because this content absolutely needs to be scaled so that more educators shift their thinking around the effective and efficient use of data. This should be a "must read" for every aspiring educational leader.
5 people found this helpful
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Phenomenal book!

I read this entire book as soon as I received it. It’s powerful food for thought!
2 people found this helpful
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Great product

Great product
2 people found this helpful
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Great Condition & Great Content

The book came in great condition. The content is fantastic and a new perspective, for me, on how we as a school community can collect data that can be really transformational for students.
1 people found this helpful
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An inspirational lens that illuminates what COULD BE!

In their incredible book, Street Data, Shane Safir and Jamila Dugan help us to envision education not as it IS but as it COULD BE. They begin their book by highlighting the inequitable beliefs and practices that have long derailed our efforts to put students first and then show educators what shifts are needed to confront those beliefs and practices head on with specific suggestions to apply and implement where it’s needed most. Street Data couldn't have come at a better time when so much change is needed. Shane and Jamila offer us next steps to envision and move toward that change.
1 people found this helpful
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practical guidance and inspiration to center student experience

Shane Safir and Jamila Dugan do a masterful job at critiquing our current education system and its over-reliance on test scores. More importantly, they give us a way forward--Street Data. This is a term they use to describe how those of us in education need to pay more attention to the daily, lived experiences of students, we need to hear their stories, we need to learn with and lead with students.

After reading this book, I have found myself bringing student voice into so many different aspects of my work. As a leader of professional development in my district, I have been inviting students to speak to teachers in each of the PD spaces I lead to profound effect. Students have inspired teachers, reminded them of why they do this work, affirmed where they are doing well, and given great feedback on how we can better support them. In my work as a supervisor, I have been encouraging those I work with to include students in helping them think about designing PD. As an instructor of pre-service teachers, I have brought students in to share their experiences in the classroom to challenge the aspiring teachers to think about alternative ways of demonstrating knowledge. In other words, this book has had a profound impact in how I'm thinking about the role of students in decision making and in how I am making decisions as a leader.

This book has been a mirror to my own practice and pushed me to act out my values with more integrity.
1 people found this helpful