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Showing 46 to 60 of 513 results Save | Export
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Diskin, Talia – History of Education, 2021
The article reviews texts from central children's weeklies during Israel's first decade (1948-1958) and portrays them as a platform for legal and moral principles aimed at the country's youngest citizens. By focusing on the first decade of Israel, which posed Israeli leadership and citizens with many challenges, the article addresses the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Periodicals, Journalism, Children
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Davids, Nuraan; Waghid, Yusef – Africa Education Review, 2019
By far the most challenging task faced by schools in post-apartheid South Africa, has been the distance educational leaders were mandated to put between the educational institutions and the apartheid legacy of racial discrimination and exclusion. It is therefore not surprising that there are two dominant approaches to educational leadership,…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Social Change, Racial Segregation, Racial Discrimination
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Joy Ann Williamson-Lott – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2024
In the middle of the 20th century, trustees, elected officials, and others in the southern United States required black and white institutions to forfeit academic freedom protections when faculty research and teaching threatened to undermine white supremacy. In the early 21st century, faculty who critique white supremacy are facing similar attacks…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Democracy, Educational History, United States History
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Mizrav, Etai – Educational Policy, 2023
Decades after the Brown v. Board of Education ruling banned mandatory race-based separation of students to different schools, school segregation, and inequality in the United States are rapidly increasing. In this research synthesis, I propose a model for explaining how segregation and inequality are formed in urban and suburban school systems and…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Educational Policy, Desegregation Litigation, School Desegregation
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Davids, Nuraan – Policy Futures in Education, 2021
The segregation enforced during apartheid has not only ensured widely disparate South African university landscapes, but also framed constructions of activism in historical discourses of racial disenfranchisement and marginalisation. As a result, activism is implicitly and explicitly associated with disadvantaged universities; with black students;…
Descriptors: Activism, Advocacy, Educational Change, Social Change
Holme, Jennifer Jellison; Finnigan, Kara S. – Harvard Education Press, 2018
In "Striving in Common," Jennifer Jellison Holme and Kara S. Finnigan seek to build a bridge between two largely disparate, yet interconnected, conversations--those among education reformers on the one hand, and urban reformers on the other. In this carefully considered volume, the authors show how the challenges faced by urban schools…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Equal Education, Educational Change, School Desegregation
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Aitchison, John; McKay, Veronica – Australian Journal of Adult Learning, 2021
This article is based on our two narratives through which we explore how Freirean thought had an impact on our respective praxis as academic activists in apartheid South Africa. We reflect specifically on the influence the work of Freire had on informing and advancing our respective struggles against apartheid education. This article therefore…
Descriptors: Activism, Critical Theory, Foreign Countries, Educational Philosophy
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Annett, Danielle – Penn GSE Perspectives on Urban Education, 2017
Danielle Annett begins this article by saying that, although the "Brown" decision was more than 60 years ago, communities remain largely segregated, prompting the latest in questionable desegregation attempts. Students are not failing within a strong and well-funded system; rather, an inequitably funded system is failing strong students.…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, Educational Equity (Finance), Resource Allocation, Minority Group Students
Rebora, Anthony – Educational Leadership, 2019
In an interview, Beverly Daniel Tatum, author of "Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria," discusses schools, race, and identity today.
Descriptors: Race, Racial Identification, Minority Group Students, Racial Bias
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Toch, Thomas – Education Next, 2020
When the District of Columbia's city councilors handed Mayor Adrian Fenty control of the city's public schools in 2007, they were hoping for salvation. Or maybe just absolution. Fenty appointed Michelle Rhee, then-president of The New Teacher Project, as chancellor. She and her longtime colleague and eventual successor Kaya Henderson spent the…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Educational Change, Academic Achievement, School Choice
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Ebewo, Patrick J.; Sirayi, Mzo – Africa Education Review, 2018
During the apartheid rule in South Africa, established universities and other tertiary institutions were forcibly segregated to serve particular racial groups. Some critics have stated that the apartheid regime in South Africa supported an exclusively Western model of education, and that university education was based on a mono-cultural approach…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Social Change
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Grunebaum, Heidi – Education as Change, 2018
Memory politics are often regarded as the "soft" issues contested in the aftermath of political and social upheaval. Yet critical public debates on memory, justice, impunity and reconciliation in South Africa prompted by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) process suggest otherwise. I offer a partial review of some of the key…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, World History, Memory, Political Issues
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Voelkel, Micki; Henehan, Shelli – Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, 2019
"Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power" is an exhibition of American Black artists from the 1960s through 1980s. Originally developed by the Tate Modern in London, the exhibition travelled to Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas, in early 2018. When we visited the exhibition, we intended to study how…
Descriptors: African Americans, Artists, United States History, Museums
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Ndlovu, Malika Lueen – Education as Change, 2020
Poetry informed by indigenous knowledge systems, whether written, spoken or heard, offers ideal pathways for healing and transformation. Being "medicine" in the broadest non-clinical sense, it is deeply restorative as activism, as caregiving practice and as balm in the face of relentless assaults on our bodies and beings. This I…
Descriptors: Poetry, Indigenous Knowledge, Activism, Poets
Rotberg, Iris C. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2020
As U.S. suburbs become more racially and ethnically diverse, they have the opportunity to make their schools similarly diverse. But integration is not assured, even in districts with significant demographic diversity. Iris Rotberg draws on Montgomery County Public Schools, a suburban Maryland district, to illustrate the opportunities and risks…
Descriptors: Suburban Schools, School Districts, School Segregation, Racial Segregation
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