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Joseph, Nicole M.; Haynes, Chayla; Patton, Lori D. – Educational Researcher, 2021
What does it mean to expand the epistemological terrain in education research to improve educational equity? This feature article attends to this question by opening a national conversation with education researchers who take up intersectionality in their study of Black women in higher education, specifically, the application of KimberlĂ©…
Descriptors: Writing for Publication, African Americans, Females, Educational Research
Haynes, Chayla; Joseph, Nicole M.; Patton, Lori D.; Stewart, Saran; Allen, Evette L. – Review of Educational Research, 2020
KimberlĂ© Crenshaw's scholarship on Black women has been the springboard for numerous education studies in which researchers use intersectionality as a theoretical framework; however, few have considered the possibilities of intersectionality as a methodological tool. In this literature synthesis, the authors (a) examined studies about Black women…
Descriptors: Females, African Americans, Higher Education, Educational Research
Haynes, Chayla; Stewart, Saran; Allen, Evette – Journal of Negro Education, 2016
The authors use Franklin's Invisibility Syndrome Paradigm to deconstruct prior experiences in U.S. classrooms, with the goal of understanding how those experiences contributed to their persistence as Black women doctoral students. Findings reveal that a master narrative rooted in racist and sexist ideology was enacted in the classroom and reified…
Descriptors: African American Students, Females, Doctoral Programs, Graduate Students