Tuesday, December 18, 2018

AERA Announces the 2019 Undergraduate Student Education Research Training Workshop

American Educational Research Association
The American Educational Research Association (AERA) invites applications for an Undergraduate Student Education Research Training Workshop to be held Friday, April 5 through Sunday, April 7 during the 2019 Annual Meeting in Toronto, Canada. Below is a brief description.
  
We are seeking your assistance in sharing this information and identifying potential candidates. The application deadline is Thursday, January 10, 2019.
  
You may contact me at fellowships@aera.net or 202-238-3200 if you have any questions or concerns. I thank you in advance for sharing information about this Fellowship.
  
Best regards,

George L. Wimberly
Director of Professional Development
Diversity Officer
  
  
AERA Undergraduate Student Education Research Training Workshop
  
Now accepting applications
  
Deadline: Thursday, January 10, 2019
  
The American Educational Research Association (AERA) is pleased to announce the AERA Undergraduate Student Education Research Training Workshop. The workshop, led by junior and senior scholars, will give fellows an overview of how education research is designed across fields, how quantitative and qualitative research methods are used in studies, and how research is applied to education policy and practice. Senior researchers and faculty from both academic institutions and applied research organizations (i.e., The American Institutes for Research, Educational Testing Service, the College Board, and the Urban Institute) will introduce education research as a field and share their area of expertise and knowledge with the fellows. In addition to attending the workshop and participation in the poster session, fellows will attend pre-selected paper sessions and presentations during the 2019 Annual Meeting in Toronto, Canada. Fellows are required to participate in all Workshop events and the invited poster session during the 2019 AERA Annual Meeting in Toronto, Canada.
  
Dates: The Workshop activities will take place Friday, April 5 – Sunday, April 7, 2019 during the 2019 Annual Meeting in Toronto, Canada.
  
Award: Fellows will participate in the Undergraduate Student Education Research Training Workshop during the AERA 2019 Annual Meeting in Toronto, Canada. The award includes conference registration and two nights of lodging. The fellows and/or their home institutions are responsible for transportation costs to Toronto, Canada. Most meals are part of the Workshop activities.
  
Eligibility: Candidates may come from a broad range of fields across the arts and sciences. Underrepresented racial and ethnic minorities and women are encouraged to apply. Candidates must be:
  • Students in their sophomore, junior, or senior year of college in good academic standing.
  • Interested in pursuing a graduate or professional degree that can lend itself to education research areas such as children and youth, school and schooling issues, higher education, education policy, student achievement, curriculum and instruction, education psychology, or education leadership.
  • Have current or ongoing research that can be presented in a poster session.
  • U.S. citizens or permanent residents; non-U.S. citizens attending a school in the U.S.
  
Where to Apply: AERA will accept applications via the AERA Undergraduate Student Education Research Training Workshop online application system.
  
All materials must be received by 11:59 p.m. (PST) on Thursday, January 10, 2019.
  
Direct any questions about the fellowship program, eligibility requirements, or submission process to George L. Wimberly, Director of Professional Development, at 202-238-3200 or fellowships@aera.net.
  
About AERA
  
AERA, founded in 1916, is concerned with improving the educational process by encouraging scholarly inquiry related to education and evaluation and by promoting the dissemination and practical application of research results. AERA shares the products of scholarly research with peers, future educational researchers, practitioners, policymakers, and the public through its annual meeting, publications, and professional development activities.
  
American Educational Research Association
1430 K Street, NW
Suite 1200
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 238-3200

The SELI 2019 Application Is Officially Open. Apply Now!

 
Southern Education Leadership Initiative Webinar
Tuesday, December 18th @ 1:00pm ET 
Passionate about improving our education system? 

Learn more about the Southern Education Leadership Initiative and the benefits of participation. Gain insight into this paid 
8-week summer fellowship for college juniors, seniors, and graduate students aspiring toward careers in education. Seize the opportunity to ask questions and hear directly from former SELI fellows. 
2019 Applications Are Now Available!
Follow the ongoing conversation about these young leaders!
#SELI2019
The Southern Education Leadership Initiative is designed to provide emerging leaders with hands-on experience supporting nonprofits and school districts as they address the South's most pressing education issues. Fellows may have the opportunity to work on research, advocacy, and policy analysis 
in key places in the South.
Learn how you or someone you know can participate in this leadership development experience today!
For questions regarding who should apply for the 2019 SELI cohort, 

Be sure to add info@southerneducation.org to your contact list to ensure our emails are delivered this time & every time to your inbox.
 

Monday, December 17, 2018

Wichita State University, Associate or full Professor Position in Latinx Studies


Wichita State University
Associate or full Professor Position in Latinx Studies
In order to better serve its growing population of Latinx students, Wichita State University seeks to hire a senior faculty member to lead development of Latinx Studies at the university. This senior faculty member will work with academic leadership, including the President, Provost, Vice President for Diversity, and deans, to coordinate campus-wide Latinx initiatives, including the recruitment and hiring of a faculty cluster hire in Latinx studies.
We plan to hire 4-5 new faculty members and one staff person whose expertise in Latinx (Latino/Latina) studies would be combined with proficiency in online learning and/or university and community outreach (experiential/service learning, etc.).
The first step in the process of creating this transformative cluster will be the hiring of a senior faculty member to oversee and direct growth in Latinx-related programs. The successful candidate will have tenure at the rank of associate or full professor (depending on experience) in a humanities or social science department in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences or in the Counseling, Educational Leadership, and School Psychology Department and the School of Education in the College of Applied Learning.
We seek a dynamic and visionary leader who can not only build new curricular programs, but also provide effective and nurturing leadership and support to the junior faculty in the cluster. The successful candidate will have a substantial record of publications in Latinx studies or in Latinx-related topics, extensive experience teaching and mentoring both undergraduate and graduate students, and significant experience with curriculum or program building or other relevant administrative experience. This faculty member will lead recruitment and hiring efforts for the rest of the cluster during the 2019-2020 academic year and shape new curriculum and programs that grow out of the faculty cluster.
Wichita State University enrolls over 15,000 students, approximately 11% of whom are Latinx. Latinx student organizations on campus include HALO (Hispanic American Leadership Organization), Sigma Lambda Beta, Lambda Pi Upsilon, and Kappa Delta Chi, as well as Hispanic-related groups such as SHPE (Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers) and Sigma Delta Pi (Spanish Honors Society). Wichita State is located in Sedgwick County, where 13% of the population is Hispanic, and the city of Wichita has an active and growing Latino/Latina community. Some cities in western Kansas are over 50% Hispanic. Local organizations such as the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and the Kansas Hispanic Education and Development Foundation routinely work closely with WSU.
The deadline for application materials, consisting of a cover letter, CV (with references), statement of leadership philosophy, and samples of scholarly work in Latinx studies is Friday, January 25, 2019. Candidates must apply online and submit materials at http://jobs.wichita.edu.
Salary is competitive. Offers of employment are contingent upon completion of background checks as required by the Kansas Board of Regents. Wichita State University does not discriminate in its programs and activities on the basis of race, religion, color, national origin, gender, age, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, marital status, political affiliation, status as a veteran, genetic information or disability. The following person has been designated to handle inquiries regarding nondiscrimination policies: Executive Director, Office of Equal Employment Opportunity, Wichita State University, 1845 Fairmount, Wichita, KS 67260-0138; telephone (316) 978-3186.

Friday, November 30, 2018

Seven Guilty of the Murder Berta Caceres: Court Signal Intellectual Authors Still at Large

Honduran Court found Seven Guilty of the Murder of Honduran Indigenous Rights Leader;
Judges Signal Intellectual Authors Still at Large
In a press conference following a historic ruling that not only found seven men guilty of the murder of Honduran indigenous rights defender Berta Caceres, but also signaled that additoinal executives in the DESA hydroelectric corporation and others outside of that structure, shared responsibility. 
Berta's daughters Laura and Berta Zuniga Caceres stood behind a banner stating "The Atalas are Missing."  The Atalas Zablah families, one of the most influential families in Honduras, dominates the Board of Directors of the DESA corporation.  Jose Eduardo Atala Zablah is President of the BAC Honduras Bank, while cousins of the Atala Zablah brothers, the Atala Faraj family, own the FICOHSA Bank. 
Berta Caceres' murder was the culmination of a pattern of persecution by DESA against the organization she coordinated, COPINH, and Lenca communities opposed to DESA's hydroelectric project in the Lenca indigenous region of Rio Blanco.  GHRC accompanies dozens of indigenous communities in Guatemala and Honduras that suffer similiar patters of violence and criminalization by investors seeking access to natural resource rights handed out over the past decades without regard to existing rights of local communities.
Berta Caceres' close friend. lawyer and fellow human rights advocate Victor Fernandez (in blue) stands beside Berta Caceres' daughters Laura (in orange), and Berta Zuniga Caceres.  Berta was elected coordiantor of COPINH a year after her mothers murder.
Seven Guilty of the Murder Berta Caceres: Court Signal Intellectual Authors Still at Large
November 29, 2018
Tegucigalpa,  Honduras
Today, a Honduran Criminal Court with National Jurisdiction found an active military officer, hitmen and current and former employees of the DESA hydroelectric company guilty of the murder of indigenous rights defender Berta Caceres. Judges found DESA executives planned the March 2, 2016 murder and indicated that others involved remain at large.  Sentencing is scheduled for December 10.
Judges cited evidence that demonstrated DESA’s social and environmental manager, Sergio Rodriguez, used a network of paid informants to monitor Berta’s movements, while DESA’s former security chief, retired military officer Douglas Bustillo, recruited the top-ranking special forces intelligence officer, Major Mariano Diaz, and a criminal cell he managed to carry out the murder.
Since the June 28, 2009, military coup, Berta Caceres frequently denounced the existence of State-sponsored death squads; her murder trial gave a clear illustration of how they operate.  The group led by Mariano Diaz included former soldier Henrry Hernandez, who had previously worked for private security forces employed by the Dinant Corporation, long accused of death squad activities.  Hernandez hired sicarios, street level killers that have proliferated in the drug war, Edilson Duarte, Oscar Torres, and Elvin Rapalo, to carry out the murder under the direct supervision of Hernandez. Hernandez, Duarte, Torres and Rapalo were also convicted of the attempted murder of Caceres’ colleague, Mexican human rights defender Gustavo Castro. Prosecutors had requested conviction of an eighth defendant, Edilson Duarte’s twin brother, on concealment charges, but the court found no evidence that he had knowledge of the crime.
Prosecutors presented judges with communications relating to the murder between DESA Security Chief Jorge Avila, Financial Manager Daniel Atala, and President David Castillo. Castillo is currently in detention and expected to face trial for Caceres’ murder in 2019. Prosecutors cited communications between DESA Board members including Pedro, José Eduardo and Jacobo Atala Zablah.
Berta Caceres’ murder was the culmination of a pattern of persecution by DESA against the organization she coordinated, COPINH, and Lenca communities opposed to the hydroelectric project. GHRC accompanies dozens of indigenous communities in Guatemala and Honduras that suffer similar patterns of violence and criminalization by investors seeking access to natural resources rights handed out over the past decade without regard to existing rights of communities.
COPINH reports that threats against community members who oppose DESA’s ongoing hydroelectric concession grew during the trial, forcing at least one Lenca leader to flee the region.  This may have been fueled by a smear campaign directed against COPINH. As evidence against their clients grew, a Washington based law firm hired by DESA, Amsterdam and Partners, published unsubstantiated accusations of violence by COPINH, putting the organization and its members at risk.  They also published outrageous and demeaning suggestions about Caceres’ sexual life, going so far as to assert that harassing messages sent to Caceres by Bustillo demonstrated the existence of a romantic relationship.
The Guatemala Human Rights Commission (GHRC-USA)  was present in the courtroom throughout the trial, and actively participated in the Legal Observer Mission. While the outcome of the trial reflects the strength of the evidence against the accused, there were concerns about the process, particularly the exclusion of the victims described in GHRC’s preliminary trial observation findings, particularly the expulsion of the victims from the proceedings at the start of the trial.
Before their expulsion, victims proposed two hostile witnesses, DESA employees and brothers, Hector Garcia Mejia and Olvin Mejia.  Evidence in the investigation showed that Olivn Mejia had been the subject of extensive messaging by DESA executives in December 2015, following his arrest for possession of illegal weapons and the murder of a young man in Rio Blanco.  When DESA executives sent an unusually large sum of money to a lawyer following the arrest, the charges against Mejia were inexplicably dropped. State prosecutors allowed Hector Garcia to testify but failed to question them regarding DESA’s network of informants or Mejia’s escape from murder and illegal weapons charges, and allowed him to make unsubstantiated accusations against COPINH without requesting clarification.
- Though most of the evidence was gathered in the months following the murder and during the arrests of the accused, the trial did not begin until almost two and half years after the initial arrests. The time limit for pre-trial or preventative detention expired mid-way through the trial and was further extended by the court.
Throughout the preliminary hearings, both the victims and the defense were denied access to evidence by state prosecutors, this occurred even when the Court  ordered public prosecutors to the hand over the evidence. The Court did not sanction the State prosecutors at any time for disobeying orders.
Public prosecutors did not complete the paperwork necessary to allow Gustavo Castro, the only eyewitness and a victim to the crime, to testify in proceedings.
- The delay in the start of the trial placed the victims’ in the difficult position of choosing between  risking the release of the defendants based on the expiration of pretrial detention and fully defending due process through a robust engagement in motions challenging problematic rulings.
- Despite repeated requests, prosecutors did not present Criminal Conspiracy charges against the accused, which would have facilitated the introduction of evidence that more fully described the activities of the criminal networks responsible for Berta Caceres’ murder.
- A large proportion of the evidence gathered was not analyzed by investigators until after the trial was scheduled to begin which made it logistically impossible to integrate that evidence into the trial.  
- Evidence proposed by the victims that provided important context and information regarding the broader criminal structure that conspired to commit the murder was not allowed by the court, including expert analysis that demonstrated the likelihood of participation additional conspirators. 
The victims lawyers were expelled from the trial.  As in most nations in Latin America, under Honduran law it is victim’s right to enter into the legal proceedings as “private accusation.” . This has been key to the advance litigation of human rights abuses in Latin America.  On October 19, the Court convened the parties to open the trial, but the private accusation, in accordance with Honduran law, presented a written explanation that they would not be present because the motion for recusal had still not been resolved and therefore the trial could not legally move forward. At the petition of public and private defense lawyers and the State’s prosecutors, the Court ruled to declare the private accusation, the victims and their lawyers, as having abandoned the case. Their expulsion from the trial raised serious concern amongst national and international legal observers.
- The Court proceeded with the trial before pretrial motions had been exhausted, putting the eventual ruling at risk. This includes a constitutional challenge of a ruling against a motion to allow COPINH to participate in the trial as victims.  Most importantly, a final decision regarding the motion to recuse the judges overseeing the trial has not been issued.
- The Court has refused to provide audio recordings of the trial to the victims or the public. In addition, a sensitive hearing regarding text messages by DESA executive Sergio Rodriguez was held at a time the court had announced to the public that the trial would be in recess.  Victims were also not notified of the proceeding. This meant the victims and others monitoring trial could not observe the presentation of critical evidence about the involvement of a DESA employee and former employee.

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