AERA16 Insider - April 10, 2016
 
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AERA16 Insider
April 10, 2016

Welcome to day three of the AERA Annual Meeting. Each morning, AERA16 Insider will provide tips on key sessions and events, as well as other Annual Meeting resources and highlights you won't want to miss. 

Join the conversation: Use the conference hashtag #AERA16, and follow AERA on Twitter at @AERA_EdResearch

Questions? Contact the AERA Meetings team at [email protected].

 
In This Issue:

AERA Presidential Address
Awards Luncheon
AERA E.F. Lindquist Award Lecture
Distinguished Contributions to Research in Education Award Address
Public Scholarship and Immigrant Students and Families
Public Scholars on the Social Impact of School-Related Inequalities
Research on Broadening Participation in STEM
ALSO HAPPENING TODAY:
- Exhibit Hall: Opens at 9:00 a.m.
Thinking and Acting Systemically: Improving School Districts Under Pressure: A New AERA Publication
Handbook of Research on Teaching, Fifth Edition: A New AERA Publication
DOWNLOAD THE 
ANNUAL MEETING APP


RESOURCES

2016 Annual Meeting Sponsors
AERA would like to extend a special thank you to our 2016 sponsors:
 
Platinum Sponsor
Routledge

Gold Sponsor
SAGE Publishing
 
Silver Sponsors
Teachers College Press

Access Group Center for Policy & Research Analysis

Bronze Sponsors
Montclair State University

NIE, Singapore

NORC at the University of Chicago


Today's Highlights
AERA Presidential Address: Jeannie Oakes, AERA President; University of California – Los Angeles

Public Scholarship to Educate Diverse Democracies

4:35 to 5:50 p.m., Convention Center, Level Three, Ballroom C

Session hashtag: #AERAPres
Link to Session
Session will also be live-streamed


AERA President Jeannie Oakes will give the 2016 Presidential Address, which will be centered around the meeting's theme, "Public Scholarship to Educate Diverse Democracies." As AERA turns the page to its next century, her address will examine the contributions education research can and should make to educating diverse democracies well and fairly. Reflecting back and looking forward, she will argue that the field must support, strengthen, lift up, and celebrate the work of public scholars who produce and use knowledge in concert with educators, activists, and communities struggling to bring the shifts in cultural values and political power that healthy diverse democracies require.

Following the address, Oakes will pass the proverbial torch to AERA President-Elect Vivian L. Gadsden who will begin her term at the conclusion of the conference.

A celebratory champagne reception will follow the address.

 
Awards Luncheon

12:25 to 2:25 p.m., Convention Center, Level Three, Ballroom ABC

Session hashtag: #AERAAwards
Link to Session
Session will also be live-streamed


The fourth annual AERA Awards Luncheon is an opportunity to celebrate the field of education research and the accomplishments of AERA-wide awardees and those who receive special citations. Tickets are still available for the luncheon and can be purchased online at "My AERA" to all Annual Meeting attendees, while seats remain. Free tickets are available to attendees who bring their own lunches. Go to "My AERA" to reserve.
 

AERA E.F. Lindquist Award (2015) Lecture: Howard Wainer
Four Easy Pieces
 

10:35 a.m. to 12:05 p.m., Convention Center, Level Two, Room 206

Link to Session

The E.F. Lindquist Award Lecture will be given by Howard Wainer, Distinguished Research Scientist at the National Board of Medical Examiners and Emeritus Professor (adjunct) of Statistics at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Wainer has a long-standing interest in the use of graphical methods for data analysis and communication, robust statistical methodology, and the development and application of generalizations of item response theory.will consider the contribution critical race theory (CRT) has made to educational scholarship and examine the progress made in terms of the field’s understanding of racial inequity in education since CRT was first introduced to the field. 
 

AERA Distinguished Contributions to Research in Education Award (2014) Address: Douglas Fuchs and Lynn Fuchs

2:45 to 4:15 p.m., Convention Center, Level Two, 207 A

Link to Session
 
The Distinguished Contributions to Research in Education Award will be given by Douglas Fuchs (Vanderbilt University) and Lynn Fuchs (Vanderbilt University) and will center around their paper “The Changing Counterfactual in Schools and Classrooms: Implications for Educational Research.”

 
Public Scholarship and Immigrant Students and Families: Leveraging Community and Research Partnerships

10:35 a.m. to 12:05 p.m., Convention Center, Level Two, Room 201

Session Hashtag: #AERAImmigrantRights
Link to Session
 
Focusing on the education of undocumented students and students from mixed-status families, this panel of educators, immigrant advocates, political leaders, journalists, lawyers and researchers examines the potential of public scholarship to advance equitable, research-informed immigration and education policies. Session participants include Marcelo M. Suarez-Orozco (University of California – Los Angeles), Roberto G. Gonzales (Harvard University), Laura M. Bohórquez García (United We Dream), Apolonio Morales (Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles), Sandra Lucia Osorio (Illinois State University), and Samuel Orozco (Radio Billingüe).
 
Public Scholars on the Social Impact of School-Related Inequalities: Perspectives from Multiple Disciplines

8:15 to 9:45 a.m., Convention Center, Level Two, Room 202 A

Link to Session
Session will also be live-streamed
 
Recent research provides strong evidence that unequal educational outcomes between richer and poorer students are due in part to curricular inequalities occurring within schools and between schools. Accordingly, rather than ameliorating background inequalities, the U.S. educational system may be exacerbating them. This session premiers a new short video—an artifact of public scholarship that communicates these research findings. Scholars from multiple disciplinary perspectives (sociology, economics, political science, and educational theory) will discuss implications of this research. Session participants include Greg Duncan (University of California – Irvine), Jennifer Jennings (New York University), Debra Satz (Stanford University), Bob Wise (Alliance for Excellent Education), Michael Cohen (Achieve).
 
Research on Broadening Participation in STEM: Future Directions at the National Science Foundation

2:45 to 4:15pm, Convention Center, Level Two, Room 204 C

Link to Session

Chair: Shirley Malcom (American Association for the Advancement of Science)
Participant: Sylvia Margaret James (National Science Foundation)
Discussants: Henry T. Frierson (University of Florida), Freeman A. Hrabowski, III (University of Maryland - Baltimore County), Estela M. Bensimon (University of Southern California)
 
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Contact AERA
 
2016 Annual Meeting
"Public Scholarship to Educate Diverse Democracies"
 
Friday, April 8 - Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Washington, D.C.


Questions?
Contact the AERA Meetings Team at [email protected]
 
 
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