Nygreen, Kysa

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Assistant Professor, Department of Teacher Education & Curriculum Studies, College of Education
Last Name
Nygreen
First Name
Kysa
Discipline
Education
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Introduction
Kysa Nygreen’s research and teaching address topics of race, class, and culture in education; urban schooling; critical and anti-racist pedagogies; participatory action research; and educational ethnography. One strand of her research is focused on youth identity formation in school—that is, how students develop a sense of “their place” within the social world—and how these identities, in turn, shape educational achievement. A second strand of her research focuses on practices of education for social change. In this work, she explores the use of popular education, participatory action research, and critical pedagogy as strategies for engendering social critique and equitable change in education. A core theme in her research is the study of how educational institutions and actors (e.g. teachers, teacher-educators, education reformers, students, and parents) contribute to reproducing or challenging patterns of social inequality. Professor Nygreen teaches courses in urban education, adolescent identity, educational diversity, and qualitative/participatory research methods.
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  • Publication
    "A View from the Field:" A Practitioner's Perspective on Teacher Education as a Site of Nonviolent Resistance – An Interview With Barbara Madeloni
    Nygreen, Kysa; O'Brien, Dani
    In this audio piece, Dani O’Brien interviews the President of the Massachusetts Teacher’s Association (MTA), Barbara Madeloni. The MTA is the 110,000-member union representing educators in public PK-12 and higher education in Massachusetts. Barbara Madeloni is an education activist, a former high school English teacher, and a teacher-educator at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. She was elected President of the MTA in 2014, supported by a grassroots organization of teachers working to move the union in a more progressive, and activist, direction. In the interview, Barbara explains how the corporate assault on education produces structural violence, and talks about the nonviolent resistance she and other educators are engaged in. She discusses her campaign to become union president and the work she hopes to accomplish in that office.
  • Publication
    Holyoke Ethnic Studies Program Report: 2021-2022 School Year
    (2022-01) Arce, Joel A.; McNeill, Olivia; Nygreen, Kysa
    Cariño. Community. Criticality. Culturally Relevant Content. Centering Students. How might schools in the U.S. be different if these five concepts were the guiding principles of teaching and learning? What transformations—what individual and societal shifts—might we experience if all members of our learning communities, particularly those from historically marginalized groups, were met with love, respect, support, an opportunity to understand the root causes of societal issues, and a chance to see themselves and their communities as irreplaceable parts of history? For students, teachers, and supporters of Holyoke Ethnic Studies (HES), these five concepts, also known as the 5 C’s, are not just aspirations, they are everyday realities waiting to be shared. In Holyoke, HES has experienced documented success in the form of student achievement, engagement, and matriculation. The heart of HES, however, is in the power of the people who advocate for humanizing education spaces with cariño, community, criticality, culturally relevant content, and students at the center. The purpose of this report is to offer a snapshot of the people, efforts, and legacies at the core of this important work. We begin with an explanation of Ethnic Studies, broadly answering the question: What is Ethnic Studies and why is it important? Next, we offer an overview of the HES program, paying special attention to the 5 C’s, the curriculum, community and university partnerships, and impact data on the program. We then situate HES among the legacies and lineages of other Ethnic Studies programs and activist movements throughout the U.S. in the following section, before sharing opportunities for solidarity and community engagement. We hope that this report can be a tool for educators, students, administrators, and community members to see themselves reflected in the broader fight for educational justice.