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Bryan J. Duarte – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
Critical quantitative methods provide opportunities for Queer Theory to challenge, re-define, and re-claim the historically privileged research tradition. In this paper, I begin by summarizing the various binaries that oppress research and individuality. I then engage with Queer Theory and my own intersectional positionality to propose a nonbinary…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Research Methodology, Social Justice, Homosexuality
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Kamden K. Strunk – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
Quantitative methods have a long historical entanglement with oppressive ideologies, including eugenics, white supremacism, and anti-LGBTQ+ ideology. Increasingly, scholars have made attempts at rectifying quantitative methods by bringing them into conversation with critical theoretical frameworks. One such example is QuantCrit, which attempts to…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Research Methodology, Ideology, Critical Race Theory
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Potter, Troy – Journal of Literacy Research, 2022
Since the 1990s, there have been increasing calls to "queer" curricula in order to challenge gender and sexuality norms. In this article, I develop a model of queer literacies that understands queer to encompass anti-normative ways of being and recognizes the agentic potential of queer objects to disorient individuals and spaces. I…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Identity, Picture Books
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Amanda Davis Simpfenderfer; Romeo Jackson; Danielle Aguilar; C. V. Dolan; Jason C. Garvey – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
This paper aims to unsettle assumptions of generalizability and representativeness in quantitative research using queer framings and positionalities. We argue that generalizability and representativeness are tools of supremacist dominance that reinforce harmful and essentialist categories of identities for the false purpose of statistical…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, Statistical Analysis, Generalizability Theory, Research Methodology
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Kelly, Emma Jean – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2019
This article emerges from a wider study on bicultural film archiving practice. It focuses on Jonathan Dennis as a subject of (my) archiving, and as a distinctive archivist himself in relation to a specific archive at a particular moment. Dennis' practice differed significantly from North American and European conventions contemporaneous with his…
Descriptors: Films, Archives, Indigenous Populations, Social Justice
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Bazarsky, Debbie; Edwards, Brian James; Jensen, Luke; Subbaraman, Sivagami; Sugiyama, Bonnie; Travers, Shaun – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2022
These Standards of Practice inform the work of LGBTQIA+ directors and professionals and establish direction for the profession. Developed in conjunction with and approved by the Consortium of Higher Education Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender (LGBT) Resource Professionals, these 12 competencies provide: (a) a resource for current and future…
Descriptors: Competence, Skills, Homosexuality, Sexual Identity
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Nakabayashi, Hayato – New Horizons in Adult Education & Human Resource Development, 2016
Originally from Japan, Dr. Mitsunori Misawa is a professor of the Higher and Adult Education program in the Department of Leadership at the College of Education, Health and Human Sciences, at the University of Memphis in the United States. This paper introduces what led Dr. Misawa to study and work in the United States, how he came to pursue an…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Adult Education, Homosexuality, Activism
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Callier, Durell M. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2018
Still, Nobody Mean More explores how Black youth constructed as queer subjects by state apparatuses and sociocultural institutions encounter, survive, and resist premature death. Engaging with women and queer of color theories this paper interrogates how the queerness of Blackness works to erase certain subjects from contemporary political…
Descriptors: Feminism, African Americans, Females, Social Justice
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Brand, Susan Trostle; Maasch, Susan L. – Childhood Education, 2017
By using carefully selected children's literature and related curricular activities, and including parents and community members in information sessions and newsletters, teachers can make a positive difference in the lives of individuals who are transgender and/or those who live in diverse families. As children see positive depictions of children…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Books, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Identity
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Wargo, Jon M. – Theory Into Practice, 2019
Working to combat, speak back to, and shift discourses concerning issues of genders, sexuality/ies, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and 2-spirit (LGBTQ2) identities in school classrooms and curriculum, this article highlights the capacity in building more inclusive elementary classroom spaces through tinkering in teacher education.…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Homosexuality, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Identity
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Gray, Emily – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2018
This paper takes as its subject the circulation of tolerance discourse within two pedagogical encounters in two Australian educational settings, and draws from the work of Wendy Brown on tolerance as a regulatory force. Brown argues that discourses of tolerance are produced within historical and cultural milieu that enable tolerance and aversion…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Prosocial Behavior, Social Justice, Gender Bias
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Wagaman, M. Alex; Shelton, Jama; Carter, Rebecca – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2018
The inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) perspectives and experiences in the social work classroom is necessary to adequately include LGBTQ students and prepare graduates to practice effectively. Drawing from queer theory as a theoretical framework and the authors' experiences in practice and teaching/learning spaces…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, Social Work, Inclusion, College Students
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Wade, Jeannette M.; Bean, Anderson; Teixeira-Poit, Stephanie – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2019
This essay discusses the benefits of promoting social justice through the scholarship of teaching and learning. We start by highlighting the prevalence of injustices and discrimination (racism, sexism, homophobia, heteronormativity) experienced on college campuses in the US. We go on to highlight the (1) outcomes associated with social justice…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Scholarship, Instruction, Learning
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Sedillo, Paul James – Parenting for High Potential, 2018
Gifted children are often empathetic, morally sensitive, and feel a responsibility toward others. As they become aware of the injustices in their surrounding communities, they may embark on a quest for justice for individuals who are oppressed, marginalized, or misunderstood. With Gay Pride Month in June bringing increased visibility and awareness…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Homosexuality, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Identity
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Skrlac Lo, Rachel – Theory Into Practice, 2019
This article proposes a reflective process to increase awareness of heteronormativity in student-teacher and student-student interactions. I used 3 theoretical lenses -- queer, feminist, and intersectional -- to identify and analyze how gender, sex, and sexuality norms influenced interactions in an after-school reading club. This research site was…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Peer Relationship, Interaction, Homosexuality
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