The Education Election: Community Organizing to Envision and Advance a Progressive Education Agenda

2014, NO.39

How did community organizations and residents create an equity-driven education agenda and transform the public debate in the 2013 New York City mayoral campaign? The authors in this issue of VUE share the stories of the community organizations that made that happen.


by
Oona Chatterjee

An array of community organizations forged a citywide coalition in New York City to create an equity-driven education vision and impact the 2013 mayoral campaign and election.

includes video
by
Billy Easton

Community organizers and advocates in New York City developed a two-pronged strategy for change in the 2013 mayoral campaign and election after twelve years of market-driven reforms.

by
Fiorella Guevara

An innovative community engagement process in New York City led to an education platform that reflected both the priorities of the community and research on best practices.

includes video
by
Phil Weinberg, Kim Sweet, Doug Israel, and Liz Sullivan-Yuknis

New York City policy experts reflect on how they co-created policy recommendations that incorporated community expertise.

by
Julian Vinocur

Youth, parents, and teachers in New York City used traditional and new media to broadcast loudly against education policies that were not working – and to demand change.

by
Pedro Noguera

The mayoral election in New York City represented a rejection of market-driven philosophies, but advocates must move beyond a critique of failed reforms to implement a new agenda.

by
María C. Fernández and Ocynthia Williams

The successful campaign to position education as a pivotal issue in the 2013 mayoral campaign built on years of community and youth organizing in New York City.

by
Zakiyah Shaakir-Ansari

When parents acquire the tools and training to engage meaningfully in decision making, they become champions of educational justice and have the power to transform education.

includes video