2019 GSRC Keynote Panel

Announcing the 2019 GSCO Graduate Student Research Conference Keynote Panel! Panelists will speak about their work and make connections to the conference theme, Embracing Tensions for Equity: Bridging Research, Policy, and Practice in Education.

Keynote Panelists:
Charles Wilkes, University of Michigan
Dr. Maren Oberman, University of Michigan
Dr. Alistair Bomphray, University of Michigan
Dr. Maisha Winn, University of California, Davis

Moderator:
Ebony Perouse-Harvey

GSRC Keynote Panel

GSCO/BET Graduate Student Research Conference 2019

GSRC 2019 CFP

Embracing Tensions for Equity

Bridging Research, Policy, & Practice in Education

Friday, March 15, 2019, U-M School of Education

Proposal Applications Due January 22, 2019

As we engage in research, develop policy, and implement practice, we must resolve various tensions in order to create equitable solutions. Negotiating how to apply differing methodologies and navigating our positionalities and obligations to multiple stakeholders are a few of the inherent tensions in our work. Eliding these tensions is problematic—they have consequences for the lived experiences of every stakeholder in education, from students to policymakers.

The debate involving the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), implemented in 2012, provides an example of the type of tensions involved in equity work. The administrative protections provided to Dreamers, children and young adults who entered the United States without documentation, are now in jeopardy under the current presidential administration. Researchers, policy-makers, and practitioners must grapple with tensions related to DACA’s position as an administrative program that can be more readily “rolled back,” as well as its prohibitions against providing undocumented students with federal and state financial aid, which potentially hinders Dreamers’ access to higher education. This is just one example of some of the overlapping tensions that inform the work of researchers, policymakers, and practitioners in that area.

Reimagine your current work: how can you leverage who you are and what you bring to your work in a way that productively and generatively confronts these tensions and promotes diversity, equity, justice and inclusion?


Click here to learn more about the GSCO Graduate Student Research Conference.