FRS 002 — Sec. 021 —
(2 units) — CRN 94051 — W 4:10 - 6:00 pm — 2375 Academic Surge
Education, Justice and the Law
Instructor: Patricia Gándara, School of Education
Description: This course introduces a number of contentious issues
in education and attempts to address the role of the law in shaping the public
policy debate surrounding those issues. Through readings, film, and discussion,
students will have the opportunity to explore a series of educational topics with
a focus on the equity concerns they engender and the impact the legal system has
on their resolution. The goal of this seminar is to provoke critical thinking
around a series of issues in education and the law, to explore the meaning and
implications of equity in education, and to re-examine some beliefs students may
hold about the role and meaning of education in a democratic society.
Format: One portion of each weekly seminar will include lecture
presentation by the instructor or a guest and/or viewing of a film. Students will
also be given readings to prepare for each session, and will be asked to provide
a two page paper based on those readings in anticipation of each meeting. The
purpose of the papers is to focus students’ thinking on a particular question
(which will be noted in the syllabus) for each week. Students will use their writings
as a basis for discussion. Grading: Grades will be based
on participation in the seminar (25%), and the quality of written papers (one
two-page paper for each of seven weeks) (75%).
About the instructor: Professor Patricia Gándara is in
the School of Education where she teaches Educational Psychology, Testing and
Evaluation, and Education and Social Policy. Her recently published books are
School Connections: US Mexican youth, peers and achievement, and The
Dimensions of Time and the Challenge of School Reform.