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"Black Dreams, Electric Mirror": Cross-Cultural Teaching of State Terrorism and Legitimized Violence
Rodriguez, S. M. – Teaching Sociology, 2022
Sci-fi has the power to open dialogue because its alternate world-building enables students to feel far enough from reality to discuss social problems unreservedly. In this essay, I review an assignment I developed using "Black Mirror" and "Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams" that present episodes in which militarized policing,…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Violence, Police, Racial Segregation
Van der Westhuizen, Marichen; Dykes, Glynnis; Carelse, Shernaaz – Journal of Social Work Education, 2023
In a postcolonial context, the influences of South African colonial and apartheid history are still visible, and much has been written about the need to decolonize learning and teaching practices. However, student protest movements point to a general dissatisfaction with the higher education context in a postcolonial and postapartheid society. In…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Postcolonialism, Educational Change, Teaching Methods
Müller, Marguerite; Le Roux, Adré; Kruger, Frans – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2022
This article presents a diffractive arts-based narrative that results from a re-turn of our work with subjectivity and memory in relation to our involvement with teaching social justice and diversity in education. Through intra-action, we explore the entanglement of subjectivity and memory in working towards different possibilities for more…
Descriptors: Memory, Social Justice, Teaching Methods, Time Perspective
Coven, Robert; Manfra, Meghan – Social Education, 2022
Access to large data sets, including geographic information systems (GIS), provides teachers and students an opportunity to investigate policies of the past and their impact on people's lives. Students now have access to these digital resources through a variety of virtual, online collections, including the Library of Congress. Using a combination…
Descriptors: Maps, Educational Technology, Geographic Information Systems, History
DeSantis, Joshua; Christopher, Cherish – Journal for Multicultural Education, 2021
Purpose: Significant differences exist in the racial composition of America's student and teacher populations. This reality is compounded by the racial re-segregation patterns affecting many schools and systems in the USA. These trends make it increasingly less likely that educators encounter racial diversity during their experiences as K-12…
Descriptors: Educational Experience, Elementary Secondary Education, Teacher Attitudes, Racial Segregation
Davids, Nuraan; Waghid, Yusef – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
Despite unimaginable geopolitical reform and re-humanisation, which saw South Africa transition from colonialism, to apartheid, and now, to a democracy, Muslim education has retained both its character and content. Overdue questions remain unanswered as it becomes evident that while politics and the world of Muslims have shifted -- locally and…
Descriptors: Muslims, Social Change, Racial Segregation, Foreign Policy
Sarah Dryden-Peterson; Natasha Robinson – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2024
We propose a new framework for understanding post-conflict history education based on ethnographic fieldwork in the same South African school two decades apart. We explore how and why teachers engage with the legacies of conflict in 1998 and 2019 by investigating how they draw boundaries around 1) time, what the conflict period is and how stark…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Social Change, Racial Segregation, Conflict
Eghosa Obaizamomwan-Hamilton – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2023
Through subversive teaching and learning methods, Black women educators have always been trailblazers and pioneers, creating space for Black students to thrive. This article provides a critical analysis of the liberatory and pedagogical prowess of Black women educators by showing them as "Transformers" with the ability to create,…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, African American Teachers, Conflict, Resistance (Psychology)
Kautz, Matthew B.; Blanco, M. Yianella – History Teacher, 2022
In this article, the authors trace their writing instruction through the 2016-2018 school years. They begin by describing how they framed the foundations of historical work and the importance of this framing for the later production of historical narratives. Then, the authors discuss how they integrated traditional literacy instruction with…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Historians, Writing Instruction, Teacher Attitudes
Marsden, Beth – History of Education, 2023
This paper examines how government approaches to education were contested by Aboriginal communities in the late 1930s, through organised political actions designed in part to ensure access to the same standard of education and schooling available to non-Aboriginal people. It explores some of the ways that Aboriginal campaigns for education were…
Descriptors: Educational History, Indigenous Populations, Public Schools, Foreign Countries
Perrotta, Katherine – Social Education, 2022
On a hot July day in 1854, 24-year-old schoolteacher Elizabeth Jennings, accompanied by a friend, attempted to board a horse-drawn trolley to attend Sunday church services in Lower Manhattan. The Irish conductor refused, telling Jennings, who was African American, to await a horsecar for "her people." When Jennings resisted, the…
Descriptors: Empathy, Court Litigation, United States History, African Americans
Roberts, Scott L.; Clabough, Jeremiah – Social Studies, 2021
U.S. politics has been primarily focused on the exploration of presidential power. People have engaged in traditional Master Narratives with the examination of U.S. Presidents where their actions are elevated and the catalysts for seismic societal changes. What is not examined in as much detail is legislative power wielded by members of the House…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, Legislators, Social Studies, United States History
Hines, Michael; Fallace, Thomas – Review of Educational Research, 2023
This article offers a critical review of the literature on how race played into the historical development of pedagogical progressivism in the late-19th and early-20th-century United States. While many historians have focused on the overt/covert racism inherent in much of progressive pedagogy as espoused by White educators, others have highlighted…
Descriptors: Progressive Education, Educational History, Teaching Methods, Racism
Costandius, Elmarie; Alexander, Neeske – British Journal of Religious Education, 2021
Christian religious belief systems may influence higher education teaching and learning. We investigated how this manifests in relation to critical citizenship education at the Department of Visual Arts of Stellenbosch University. During the facilitation of a Visual Communication Design course, which included community interaction (CI), students…
Descriptors: Christianity, Religious Factors, Beliefs, Citizenship Education
Groce, Eric Chandler; Gregor, Margaret Norville – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2020
Teaching a civil rights unit in the upper elementary grades can be difficult. Educators must sort through multiple resources, determine the quality and developmental appropriateness of the materials, synthesize and organize the resources into meaningful lessons, and teach the unit in the midst of pressures to minimize or eliminate social studies…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Teaching Methods, Elementary School Students, Childrens Literature