Donna Y. Ford Explained

Donna Y. Ford
Birth Date:1961
Occupation:Educator, anti-racist and culturally responsive advocate, consultant, author, and academic
Awards:Early Scholar Award, National Association for Gifted Children, Senior Scholar in Gifted Education Award, The American Educational Research Association, Distinguished Scholar Award, National Association for Gifted Children, Legacy Award, National Association for Gifted Children,
Website:https://www.drdonnayford.com/
Education:BA in Communication and Spanish
MEd in Counseling
PhD in Individual Differences(Educational Psychology with focus on gifted and talented Black students)
Alma Mater:Cleveland State University
Thesis Title:Self-Perceptions of Social, Psychological, and Cultural Determinants of Achievement among Gifted Black Students: A Paradox of Underachievement
Thesis Year:1991
Workplaces:The Ohio State University

Donna Y. Ford is an American educator, anti-racist, advocate, author and academic. She is a distinguished professor of education and human ecology and a faculty affiliate with the center for Latin American studies in the college of arts and sciences, and the Kirwan Institute in the college of education and human ecology at Ohio State University.[1]

Ford's research interests span the fields of gifted education and multicultural/urban education with a focus on comprehending the achievement gap, recruiting and retaining culturally different students in advanced courses, multicultural curriculum and instruction, culturally competent teacher training and development, African-American Identity, and African-American family involvement.[1] She has almost 350 publications including journal papers and book chapters. She is also the author, co-author and co-editor of 14 books including Diverse Learners with Exceptionalities: Culturally Responsive Teaching in the Inclusive Classroom, Recruiting and Retaining Culturally Different Students in Gifted Education, and Gumbo for the Soul: Liberating Memoirs and Stories to Inspire Females of Color.

Ford is a Senior Editor for Taboo: Journal of Culture and Education,[2] a Section Editor for the Journal of Negro Education, and an Associate Editor for Education and Urban Society.[3] She is a member of the National Association for Gifted Children, the Council for Exceptional Children (CEC), and the American Psychological Association.[1]

Education

Ford obtained her Bachelor of Arts degree in communication and Spanish in 1984, followed by a master's degree in counseling in 1988, and a PhD in educational psychology in 1991, all from Cleveland State University.[4] Her PhD thesis was titled Self-Perceptions of Social, Psychological, and Cultural Determinants of Achievement among Gifted Black Students: A Paradox of Underachievement.[5]

Career

Following her master's degree, Ford began her academic career as an instructor in the department of educational specialists at Cleveland State University. Subsequently, after receiving her PhD in 1991, she was appointed as an assistant professor in the college of human environmental sciences at the University of Kentucky and promoted to associate professor of the educational psychology program in the School of Education and Human Development (then the Curry School of Education) at the University of Virginia, in 1996. She later joined Ohio State University as an associate professor and then became a professor of special education there in 2002. She then moved to Vanderbilt University in 2004, where she was appointed the Harvie Branscomb Distinguished Professor. She returned to Ohio State University in 2019, where she holds the position of distinguished professor of education and human ecology and two faculty affiliates: center for Latin American studies in the college of arts and sciences and the Kirwan Institute in the college of education and human ecology at Ohio State University.[1]

Ford is the co-chair of the educational studies mentoring committee in the college of education and human ecology at Ohio State University.[1]

Ford is the co-founder of Scholar Identity Institute (SII) for Black Males, and creator of The Ford Female Achievement Model of Excellence (F2AME).[6] She has been the board member of National Association for Gifted Children and is the former co-chair of DDEL Committee at the Council for Exceptional Children.[7]

Research

Ford's research focuses on gifted and talented education, multicultural and anti-racist education, and urban education. She has authored/co-authored over 300 articles[8] She is an advocate for multicultural education, arguing that it is essential for all students, particularly those from marginalized and minoritized backgrounds, to see themselves reflected in the curriculum. She is also known for developing and implementing several culturally responsive teaching strategies and curricula for teachers and administrators.[7] Ford's research contributions have helped to ensure that all students, regardless of their racial ethnic, and economic background, have access to high-quality and culturally responsive education.

Achievement gap

Ford has a specific research focus on understanding the achievement gap and related issues among gifted students from diverse cultural backgrounds[9] and has proposed various strategies to address this gap.[10] In her research on the underachievement of African American males in urban schools, she emphasizes the importance of adopting a social justice and civil rights approach among urban educators to reverse the trend of underachievement.[11] In her book Reversing Underachievement Among Gifted Black Students: Promising Practices and Programs explores various actions that can be taken to eliminate underachievement among Black students. Geoffrey D. Borman commended this book for its practical approach towards the education sector and added, "is one of the few sources of practical information about what schools and other can do to advance the representation of minorities among the nation’s most gifted and successful students."[12] One of her substantial work in this area includes the presentation of the Elgin court case where she discussed the necessity of taking appropriate measures to address the needs of gifted students, particularly those belonging to minority groups who are significantly underrepresented in educational programs.[13]

Ford also developed the equity formula that can be used to set goals for increasing access to gifted education without using quotas. The formula takes into account the percentage of Black and Hispanic students in a district and sets minimum enrollment goals for these groups based on an allowance of 20%.[14]

Multicultural curriculum and instructions

Ford has added significant efforts towards highlighting the need,[15] importance, and implementation[16] In 1999, she proposed a framework for infusing multicultural curriculum into gifted education[17] and in a relevant study, she contended that gifted students lack infusion of diversity issues in their curriculum and this is a setback for them.[18] In her book Multicultural Gifted Education she has proposed several ways to enhance and infuse multicultural curriculum and has suggested methods for “best practice” for a classroom teacher. Janeula M. Burt reviewed her book and called it a "comprehensive blend of commentary on multicultural, gifted, and minority student education" and also recommended it to a wide audience by saying "it provides classroom teachers, gifted education teachers, administrators, policymakers, school districts and school board members with the tools for establishing, enhancing, or incorporating an authentic multicultural gifted education curriculum."[19] In the second edition of the book, she has addressed various topics including culturally responsive curriculum and assessment, historical and legal perspectives on educating gifted and minority students, and counseling students from a multicultural perspective. Moreover, the book aims to eliminate the gap between educating advanced learners and educating learners from diverse cultures.[20]

In addition to her research pursuits, Ford has worked on developing and providing training for teachers to improve their cultural competence.[15] Her publication Teaching Culturally Diverse Gifted Students offers a comprehensive guide to effective teaching techniques and essential attributes that promote diversity among students, as well as a framework for constructing a diverse and accomplished gifted program.[21]

Ford developed the Bloom Blank Matrix. Initially created in collaboration with Harris in 1999 and later updated by her in 2011, the Matrix was designed to assist educators in reviewing, critiquing, and modifying their lesson plans, as well as creating original lessons that affect students culturally and cognitively.[22] In her book, Bloom-Banks Matrix: Design Rigorous, Multicultural Curriculum for the Diverse 21st Century Classroom, co-authored with Michelle Trotman Scott, she further explored the application and benefits of the Bloom-Banks matrix in accommodating diverse learning needs and preferences of students in the class.[23]

Awards and honors

Selected books

Selected articles

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Directory. College of Education and Human Ecology.
  2. Web site: Editorial Board | Taboo: The Journal of Culture and Education | College of Education | University of Nevada, Las Vegas. digitalscholarship.unlv.edu.
  3. Web site: Editorial Board: Education and Urban Society: SAGE Journals.
  4. Web site: Donna Y. Ford. www.csualumni.com.
  5. Ford . Donna Yvette . 1991 . Self-perceptions of social, psychological, and cultural determinants of achievement among gifted Black students: A paradox of underachievement . . 24307327 .
  6. Middleton . Tanya . Ford . Donna . The Ford Female Achievement Model for Excellence (F2AME): Empowering Black Females for Success . Journal of African American Women and Girls in Education . 23 November 2022 . 2 . 2 . 9–22 . 10.21423/jaawge-v2i2a121 . 259794882 . free .
  7. Web site: Donna Ford | Center for Latin American Studies. clas.osu.edu.
  8. Web site: Donna Y Ford, PhD. scholar.google.com.
  9. Ford . Donna Y. . Grantham . Tarek C. . Whiting . Gilman W. . Another Look at the Achievement Gap: Learning From the Experiences of Gifted Black Students . Urban Education . March 2008 . 43 . 2 . 216–239 . 10.1177/0042085907312344 . 145484073 .
  10. Ford . Donna Y. . Closing the Achievement Gap: Gifted Education Must Join the Battle . Gifted Child Today . January 2011 . 34 . 1 . 31–34 . 10.1177/107621751103400110 . 149023179 .
  11. Ford . Donna Y. . Moore . James L. . Understanding and Reversing Underachievement, Low achievement, and Achievement Gaps Among High-Ability African American Males in Urban School Contexts . The Urban Review . November 2013 . 45 . 4 . 399–415 . 10.1007/s11256-013-0256-3 . 255109003 .
  12. Borman . Geoffrey D. . Book review of Reversing Underachievement Among Gifted Black Students . Journal of Education for Students Placed at Risk . April 1998 . 3 . 2 . 185–189 . 10.1207/s15327671espr0302_6 .
  13. Ford . Donna Y. . Russo . Charles J. . No Child Left Behind ... unless a student is gifted and of color: reflections on the need to meet the educational needs of the gifted . Journal of Law in Society . 2014 . 15 . 2 . 213–241 . .
  14. Ford . Donna Y. . Multicultural Issues: Recruiting and Retaining Black and Hispanic Students in Gifted Education: Equality Versus Equity Schools . Gifted Child Today . July 2015 . 38 . 3 . 187–191 . 10.1177/1076217515583745 . 141915216 .
  15. Ford . Donna Y. . Trotman . Michelle Frazier . Teachers of gifted students: Suggested multicultural characteristics and competencies . Roeper Review . June 2001 . 23 . 4 . 235–239 . 10.1080/02783190109554111 . 143912323 .
  16. Ford . Donna Y. . Howard . Tyrone C. . Harris . J. John . Using Multicultural Literature in Gifted Education Classrooms . Gifted Child Today . July 1999 . 22 . 4 . 14–21 . 10.1177/107621759902200405 . 140997014 .
  17. Ford . Donna Y. . Harris . J. John . A framework for infusing multicultural curriculum into gifted education . Roeper Review . September 2000 . 23 . 1 . 4–10 . 10.1080/02783190009554054 . 144760299 .
  18. Ford . Donna Y. . Integrating Multicultural and Gifted Education: A Curricular Framework . Theory into Practice . May 2005 . 44 . 2 . 125–137 . 10.1207/s15430421tip4402_7 . 54016360 .
  19. Burt . Janeula M. . Book Review of Multicultural Gifted Education, by Donna Y. Ford and J. John Harris, III . Journal of Education for Students Placed at Risk . July 2002 . 7 . 3 . 369–373 . 10.1207/S15327671ESPR0703_8 . 143950756 .
  20. Book: Ford . Donna Y. . Multicultural Gifted Education . 2021 . Routledge . 978-1-000-49477-8 .
  21. Book: Ford . Donna Y. . Milner . H. Richard . Teaching Culturally Diverse Gifted Students . 2005 . Prufrock Press . 978-1-59363-176-5 .
  22. Web site: Gifted cultural education model.
  23. Web site: Bloom-Banks Matrix Design Rigorous, Multicultural Curriculum for the Diverse 21st Century Classroom.
  24. Web site: Past NAGC Award Recipients | National Association for Gifted Children. nagc.org.442elmp01.blackmesh.com.
  25. Web site: Committee on Scholars of Color in Education Awards. www.aera.net.
  26. Web site: WARRIOR AWARDS. ICBME.
  27. Web site: 2023 RHSU Edu-Scholar Public Influence: Top 10 Lists.
  28. Web site: United States Scientist and University Education in United States Rankings 2023 - AD Scientific Index 2023. www.adscientificindex.com.
  29. Web site: Dr. Donna Ford, Ohio State University .