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Mary Soylu – Art Education, 2024
The National Memorial for Peace and Justice (NMPJ) opened in Montgomery, Alabama, on April 26, 2018. The memorial provides a sacred site where people can gather and reflect on America's history of racial injustice and represents an essential milestone in the ongoing process of racial reckoning in the United States. As Alabama has historically been…
Descriptors: Historic Sites, Racism, Social Justice, Activism
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Kerry Burch – Education and Culture, 2024
The paper argues that the racist underpinnings of the dominant narrative of American exceptionalism require radical exposure as a first step in turning around this discourse to serve democratic ends. As a key pedagogical element in this vision of renewal, insights from ignorance studies are employed to illustrate how teachers might integrate…
Descriptors: Racism, Nationalism, United States History, Democracy
Joan Lea Brown – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This qualitative case study focuses on renaming an elementary school in Tulsa, Oklahoma from a Confederate namesake (Robert E. Lee elementary) to a name reflecting Indigenous roots of the Muskogee Creek Nation (Council Oak). The renaming took place during a national movement of removing Confederate symbols and names from public places. The…
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, Naming, Indigenous Populations, United States History
Stein, Sharon – Johns Hopkins University Press, 2022
Over the past several decades, higher education in the United States has been shaped by marketization and privatization. Efforts to critique these developments often rely on a contrast between a bleak present and a romanticized past. In "Unsettling the University," Sharon Stein offers a different entry point--one informed by decolonial…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Decolonization, Colonialism, Educational History
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Eric Magrane; Daniel Carter – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2024
Field study and field courses are integral to the discipline of geography. While there are many forms that a field course might take, in this paper we draw on two university-level field courses in the U.S. Southwest to propose a road trip pedagogy for field study. We reflect on the particular resonance of the road trip in the American West and how…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Field Trips, Undergraduate Students, Course Descriptions
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PresleyTaylor Shilling; Jeffrey M. Byford – Social Studies, 2024
Until the beginning of the 21st century, the Tulsa Race Massacre was omitted mainly from the social studies curriculum and state-mandated standards in the United States. However, the featured lesson provides a valuable springboard to explore the historical perspectives and injustices against the Black community in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on May 31, 1921.…
Descriptors: United States History, African American History, Racism, Violence
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Bohan, Chara Haeussler; Bradshaw, Lauren Yarnell; Pecore, John L. – Schools: Studies in Education, 2023
In the United States of America, democratic education has evolved philosophically over 200 years from Jeffersonian ideas of educated citizenry to Deweyan principles of democracy as a "mode of associated living." In contemporary society, Dianna Hess has written about democratic education as a process of deliberative democracy. Yet the…
Descriptors: Democratic Values, Democracy, United States History, History Instruction
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Timothy Reese Cain – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
The 1971 passage of the Twenty-Sixth Amendment to the US Constitution was a significant step in advancing voting rights that offered a new route for young people to participate in public life. While met with enthusiasm in many quarters, the question of where a substantial segment of the youth vote--college students--would cast their ballots was a…
Descriptors: Voting, Civil Rights, College Students, Racism
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Anne Boyd – American Journal of Play, 2024
The author argues that, in the early 1920s, many urban White Americans saw in the Arctic an escape from a world of rapidly expanding technology and became captivated by images of Inuit communities. To pass down an antimodernist form of imperialism to children of the period, educators used lead ethnographic "Escimo" figurines, which…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, Educational History, Eskimos, History Instruction
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García-Louis, Claudia – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2023
The author provided a brief exploration into the origins of racial/ethnic categories and facilitated a linkage between a colonial past and the present. She encouraged educational researchers and practitioners to adopt an understanding of Latinidad beyond a pan-ethnic model of identity by making critical colonial connections. She underscored how…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Colonialism, Racism, Ethnicity
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Donavan, Janet L. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2023
This paper makes the case for why anti-racism pedagogy should be included and identified as anti-racism in political science courses and provides and evaluates an example of anti-racism pedagogy in an American Political Thought course. In addition, I address critics of anti-racism and ways of addressing those critics in the classroom. In…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, Political Science, Racism
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Beth Ribet; Leslie Bunnage – Current Issues in Education, 2024
U.S. white nationalism is virulent and escalating, expressing itself through a variety of digital and media spheres, violent assaults on Black, Jewish, Muslim, migrant and indigenous communities, and via increasing participation and alliance-building in mainstream politics. Notwithstanding the public presence, impact, and persistence of white…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Racism, Whites, Nationalism
Mary Margaret Mills-Thomason – ProQuest LLC, 2023
In 2020, as the nation experienced a racial reckoning, the North Carolina State Board of Education was in the process of adopting new social studies standards. The racial reckoning constituted a policy window to advocate for standards that better included marginalized experiences. In response, conservative lawmakers engaged in a political…
Descriptors: United States History, Social Studies, State Standards, Political Attitudes
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William Southerland – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2023
LGBTQIA+ choruses in the United States play an important role in the development of queer movement culture by providing safe spaces other than bars and clubs, by emotionally supporting queer people through extended political struggles and the AIDS crisis, and by presenting public counternarratives to anti-gay propaganda. Jon Sims, a music teacher…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Singing, Social Support Groups, Social Bias
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Justin A. Gutzwa – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2024
Literature exploring postsecondary undergraduate student experiences at the nexus of queerness, trans*ness, and Indigeneity remains relatively scant, as does scholarship taking a geospatial lens to understand the experiences of trans* collegians. Given the settler colonial history of higher education as a field and the colonial nature of the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Sexuality, LGBTQ People, Indigenous Populations
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