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Bradford, Derrell – State Education Standard, 2021
The American public education system is already a school choice system, which is navigated in four ways. Families are lucky (as the author ultimately was, having received a scholarship from grades 7-12 to an independent, all-boys school just outside the city). They are rich enough to pay private school tuition, or they are able to leverage the…
Descriptors: School Choice, Race, Social Justice, Educational Change
Knight, David S.; Hassairi, Nail; Candelaria, Christopher A.; Sun, Min; Plecki, Margaret L. – Education Finance and Policy, 2022
State budgets temporarily crashed amid the COVID-19 pandemic and economic shutdown, placing education funding at risk. To demonstrate implications for school finance, we show that (1) school districts are racially segregated along class lines; (2) higher-poverty districts receive a greater share of funds from state, as opposed to local sources,…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Finance, Economic Climate
Kim, Sage J.; Bostwick, Wendy – Health Education & Behavior, 2020
Although the current COVID-19 crisis is felt globally, at the local level, COVID-19 has disproportionately affected poor, highly segregated African American communities in Chicago. To understand the emerging pattern of racial inequality in the effects of COVID-19, we examined the relative burden of social vulnerability and health risk factors. We…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Disproportionate Representation, Death, African Americans
Kershree Padayachee; M. Matimolane – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
In the shift to Emergency Remote Teaching and Learning (ERT&L) during the COVID-19 pandemic, remote assessment and feedback became a major source of discontent and challenge for students and staff. This paper is a reflection and analysis of assessment practices during ERT&L, and our theorisation of the possibilities for shifts towards…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Social Justice, Distance Education, Feedback (Response)
Laster Pirtle, Whitney N. – Health Education & Behavior, 2020
Racial capitalism is a fundamental cause of the racial and socioeconomic inequities within the novel coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) in the United States. The overrepresentation of Black death reported in Detroit, Michigan is a case study for this argument. Racism and capitalism mutually construct harmful social conditions that fundamentally shape…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Social Bias, Death, African Americans
Chatters, Linda M.; Taylor, Harry Owen; Taylor, Robert Joseph – Health Education & Behavior, 2020
The concept of "double jeopardy"--being both older and Black--describes how racism and ageism together shape higher risks for coronavirus exposure, COVID-19 disease, and poor health outcomes for older Black adults. Black people and older adults are the two groups most affected by COVID-19 morbidity and mortality. Double jeopardy, as a…
Descriptors: African Americans, Older Adults, Aging (Individuals), Racial Bias
Motala, Shireen; Sayed, Yusuf; de Kock, Tarryn – Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
This paper seeks to understand how the curriculum is experienced across two higher education institutions to probe students' understandings of epistemic access in the context of decolonisation debates. Three particular aspects of student experience of the decolonised curriculum and pedagogy are scrutinised. First, we look at the kind of sociality…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Higher Education, Foreign Policy, Educational Change