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Esther June Kim – Teachers College Record, 2024
Background/Research Design: This ethnographic study explores how secondary students engaged with the history of Japanese American incarceration while participating in an archaeological dig at one of the prison camps used by the U.S. government during World War II, the Manzanar War Relocation Center in California. Purpose/Research Question: Using…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Place Based Education, Japanese Americans, Secondary School Students
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Kikuko Omori; Hiroshi Ota; Rachel Keiko Stark – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
Previous intergenerational communication studies paid only scant attention to acculturation orientation differences in communication between different age groups within a single culture. Many co-cultural groups in the U.S. are encountering emerging acculturation orientation differences between generations. The present study focused on one…
Descriptors: Japanese Americans, Generational Differences, Communication (Thought Transfer), Satisfaction
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Kilgore, Emily M.; Bohan, Chara Haeussler – American Educational History Journal, 2023
On December 7th and 8th, 1941, President Roosevelt issued three proclamations stating that any natives, citizens, or subjects of Japan in the United States would be liable to possible arrest, detention, or removal from the United States (Roosevelt 1941). Roosevelt followed the enemy alien proclamations with Executive Order 9066, authorizing the…
Descriptors: Acculturation, War, World History, United States History
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Naomi Ostwald Kawamura; Lynn Yamasaki – Journal of Museum Education, 2023
This article delves into the vital role played by intergenerational, cultural, and social relationships in the work of museum educators at the Japanese American National Museum (JANM). It highlights the relational exchanges among different generations of staff and volunteers. These relationships not only facilitate the intergenerational transfer…
Descriptors: Museums, Japanese American Culture, Generational Differences, Cultural Influences
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Youngji Son – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
This study explores a Japanese-Korean-English trilingual Asian-American child's identity negotiation in a multicultural book club. Drawing upon the conception of "figured world" (Holland et al. 1998. "Identity and Agency in Cultural Worlds." Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press), it investigates how the book club as "a…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Asian Americans, Self Concept, Books
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Reichmuth, Heather L.; Chong, Kyle L. – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2022
Children's literature is a powerful way to engage young learners in understanding the civil rights movement (CRM); yet at the same time, most children's books focused on the CRM often create ahistorical, inaccurate depictions by only focusing on a few key people such as Rosa Parks or Martin Luther King Jr. or events such as the March on…
Descriptors: Asian Americans, Stereotypes, Civil Rights, Teaching Methods
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Kimberly Powell – International Journal of Multicultural Education, 2024
In this article, I discuss how walking as mapping serves as a method for observing and disrupting spatial geopolitics, opening possibilities for alternative systems of living. I explore three theoretical perspectives--posthumanism, Indigenous and decolonializing theories of land, and Black geography--that, while distinct, nonetheless share some…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Educational Theories, Humanism, Indigenous Knowledge
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Social Education, 2021
Ansel Adams and Dorothea Lange's photojournalist activism during World War II was a direct response to President Franklin Roosevelt's Executive Order 9066 (EO 9066), which led to the incarceration of 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans in 10 camps across seven mostly western states. Approximately two-thirds of those imprisoned were U.S.…
Descriptors: Photojournalism, Activism, War, Institutionalized Persons
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Brita A. Bookser – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
A critical reappraisal of the origin story of early care and education (ECE) in the United States, this article unsettles dominant narratives by investigating the carceral foundations and liberatory strategies that characterise the emergence and sociopolitical evolution of ECE. Integrating Foucauldian counter-historical genealogy and…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Story Telling, Minority Group Influences, United States History