Books & Publications
Dr. JoAnne Ferrara has written an array of books delving into the realm of education with a focus on community schools. In collaboration with other experienced educators, these works offer valuable perspectives and innovative ideas for fostering effective learning environments.
Professional Development Schools are complex and comprehensive school university partnerships focusing on professional development of new teachers and veteran teachers while providing high quality education to P-12 students. The chapters of this book contain the stories of 8 highly successful and nationally recognized professional development schools. Each story provides the reader with practical ideas, procedures and policies that can be implemented by the reader to begin new partnerships or help improve and sustain existing partnerships. Each chapter discusses the rich clinical preparation combined with progressive experiences in PDSs that have made the partnership successful.
How the Professional Development School and Community School strategy might benefit from an integrated perspective serves as the guiding framework for this volume of Research in Professional Development Schools. This book advocates for blending these two approaches to address the needs of P-20 settings and their communities. Because we recognize the inherent strengths in both models, we encouraged chapters that had as a primary focus one or both models as they sought to support teacher preparation and K-12 partners.
"Thank you for allowing me to be a part of the panel. It’s important that other communities understand the value of community schools and also know that a technical assistance center exists in NY to support them".
Ferrara and Jacobson go inside community schools across the country to explore the different roles that make this collaborative education reform work. This book provides practitioners, policymakers, family members, youth, and local leaders a greater understanding of the different roles that make up a community school and tools for action.
Ferrara and Jacobson go inside community schools across the country to explore the different roles that make this collaborative education reform work. This book provides practitioners, policymakers, family members, youth, and local leaders a greater understanding of the different roles that make up a community school and tools for action.
This book examines the ways in which PDSs build cultural competence for various stakeholders including pre-service teachers, classroom teachers, school leaders, college faculty, and K-12 students. Given the increased national attention on the opportunity gap present in underserved marginalized communities across the country, the authors in this series identify a combination of research-based practices and institutional changes that increase student attainment and develop educators’ capacity to serve a range of diverse learners.
Creating Visions for University- School Partnerships: A Volume in Professional Development School Research, continues to exemplify current thinking of practitioners and researchers in the field. The range of authors from the Prek-16 arena illustrates the ways in which professional development schools generate possible solutions to the complex problems facing educators. The diversity of their work represents perspectives of classroom teachers, preservice teachers, school leaders, and university faculty who grapple with identifying “ways of knowing” and “ways of doing” that enhance educational outcomes for Prek-12 students while also serving to transform the profession.
This book is intended as a guide for practitioners interested in forming alliances within their community to support teacher and student success. Under the umbrella of a professional development school (PDS), school principals willing to engage in this type of partnership have access to a framework for school renewal. Within this school/university framework lie four critical factors that transform the ways in which teachers’ teach and schools’ function. The professional development school model takes a holistic approach to revitalizing schools by sharing knowledge, resources, practices, and the collaborative efforts of P-12 educators and the higher education community.
This volume in the Research in Professional Development Schools book series considers the role professional development schools (PDSs) play in expanding opportunities for linking research and clinical practice. As in past volumes of this series, PDS practitioners and researchers make a compelling case for the power of micro-level initiatives to change practice. Contributors share ideas to expand PDS work beyond site-specific contexts to include a broader macro-level agenda for clinical practice. Authors hope to inspire large scale PDS reform through replication of successful initiatives featured in this volume. Evoking change is not easy. Nonetheless, series editors and contributors conclude that PDSs generate a critical mass of PK-16 educators willing to form partnerships to address enduring educational dilemmas.
Book Chapters
Caldas, S., Gómez, D. W., & Ferrara, J. (2020). Impact of a full service community school on student achievement. In M. G. Sanders & C. L. Galindo (Eds.). Review on the success of full-service community schools in the US: Challenges and opportunities for students, teachers, and communities (pp.7-30). New York: Routledge.
Deacon, M., Ferrara, J., Mills, T., Hewitt, C. (2019). Freedom to lead: Building school leadership capacity in the United Kingdom. In V. Storey (Ed), Leading in change:Implications of school diversificationfor school leadership preparation in England and the United States. (pp.79-92). Charlotte, NC: Information Age.
Ferrara, J., & Gómez, D. W. (2019). Re-imagining teacher preparation: The role of community schools. In J. Ferrara & R. Jacobson (Eds.). Community schools: People and places transforming education and communities (pp. 57-69). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
Ferrara, J. & Gomez, D. (2014). Negotiating the expanded roles of PDS liaisons in full-service community schools. In J. Ferrara & J. Nath & I. Guadarrama, (Eds.), Creating visions for university-school partnerships, professional development schools research, volume 5 (pp.317-326). Charlotte, NC: Information Age.
Gómez, D. W., Ferrara, J., Santiago, E., Fanelli, F., & Taylor, R. (2012). Full-service community schools: A district’s commitment to educating the whole child. In A. Honigsfeld & A. Cohan (Eds.), Breaking the mold of education for culturally and linguistically diverse students: Innovative and successful practices for the 21st century (pp. 65-73). Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Education.
Ferrara, J. & Santiago, E. (2011). Helping preservice teachers support the needs of the “whole child” in a PDS. In I. Guadarrama, J. Ramsey, & J. Nath (Eds.), Investigating university-school partnerships, Professional Development Schools Research, Volume 4. (pp. 373-378). Charlotte, NC : InformationAge.
Ferrara, J., Santiago, E., & Siry, C. (2008). Preparing teachers to serve diverse learners: A PDS /full-service community school model. In I. Guadarrama, J. Ramsey, & J. Nath (Eds.), Professional Development Schools research, Volume 3. Greenwich, Connecticut: InformationAge Publishing, 151-161.
Siry, C., Ferrara, J., & Lang, D. (2014) Preparing preservice teachers in a PDS context: Insights into field-based methods courses. In J. Ferrara, J. Nath, & I. Guadarrama (Eds.), Creating visions for university-school partnerships, professional development schools research, volume 5 (pp.179-192). Charlotte, NC: Information Age.
Carvin, J, Ferrara, J. & Pockl, K. (2022), Reimagining Our Future Together: One World 2022. In F.Reimers, et al (Ed.), Dialogues for a New Social Contract for Education: Collaborations to Reimagine Our Futures Together (pp.207-212).Springer
Ferrara, J., Carvin, J., Pilar Zamudio Ochoa, R. (2022). Building Global Competence in Pre-school Setting: One World a Global Citizen Education Program in Guerro, Mexico In M, Ozturk (Ed). Educational Response, Inclusion, and Empowerment for SGDs in Emerging Economies. (pp159-174). Springer