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Stephen McKinney – Journal of Religious Education, 2024
The assassination of Ignacio Ellacuría and seven others at the Universidad Centroamericana José Simeon Cañas (UCA) in San Salvador in 1989 has had a deep and profound impact on the world-wide Jesuit community and the Catholic Church. His philosophy and theology of liberation have been carefully studied, as has his vision and operation of the UCA…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Religious Colleges, Universities, Catholics
El Halwany, Sarah; Bencze, Larry; Hassan, Nurul; Schaffer, Kristen; Milanovic, Minja; Zouda, Majd – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2021
In life history methodologies, 'human' lives appear to take primacy over other lives. Within science education literature, life history methods often are approached as reflective tools to make meaning out of teachers' pedagogical practices and commitments. In the present research, we tinker with life history research, to follow its performative…
Descriptors: Science Education, Educational Research, Biographies, College Faculty
Eickhoff, Shannon L. – Educational Considerations, 2021
Anna Julia Cooper transcended her historical place in time to become one of the most important examples of early resistance to intersectional oppression. Her seminal work, "A Voice from the South" (1892), articulates her feminine viewpoint on philosophy, social policies, religion, and the status of Black women's education. Often using…
Descriptors: African Americans, African American Education, African American History, Feminism
Carrillo, Juan F.; Ender, Tommy; Perez, Josmell J. – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2018
Drawing from Cervantes-Soon's (2012) framework of "testimonios" as confessions, counter-narratives, and "consejos," we explore how writing letters to our children serves as a process of historical documentation, healing, and a passing down of social justice principles and family history. Additionally, we expand on…
Descriptors: Letters (Correspondence), Parent Child Relationship, Social Justice, Documentation
Courtney Rivard – College Composition and Communication, 2019
Using assignments drawn from a first-year composition course that centers the Southern Life Histories Collection, part of the New Deal's Federal Writers' Project, this paper argues for a pedagogical approach that teaches students digital literacy through archival rhetorics by converting archival texts into data.
Descriptors: Archives, Writing (Composition), Media Adaptation, Electronic Publishing
David, Miriam E. – Gender and Education, 2017
This is a reflective account of the publication of two books in the same year (2016): "Reclaiming Feminism: Challenging Everyday Misogyny" and "Feminist Manifesto for Education." The former is a popular but scholarly memoir, and the latter is an academic text for sociology and education. It was never my intention to publish…
Descriptors: Reflection, Biographies, Writing for Publication, Feminism
Apple, Michael W. – Educational Policy, 2019
In education, the areas of critical policy studies, critical cultural studies, and critical curriculum studies all owe a good deal to a number of people. Among them are Paulo Freire, Raymond Williams, Pierre Bourdieu, Basil Bernstein, and Antonio Gramsci. Yet no such listing would be complete without the inclusion of Stuart Hall. The two books I…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Philosophy, Books, Educational Theories
Elbih, Randa – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2020
Much of the conversation about inequality in education and society problematizes poor and minority populations, rather than tackling systemic issues. It helps to address these issues through using a lens that exposes dominant ideology. This article examines the exclusion of scholars outside of the ideological center. It also suggests that…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Educational Philosophy, Case Studies, Poverty
Musgrove, Nell – History of Education, 2016
A three-year-old boy, born in Melbourne, Australia, in 1892, lived the final months of his life in an abusive foster home. His death barely made a ripple in the press, and the system proved unable or unwilling to deal with much of the most disturbing evidence about the perpetrators of abuse. This article argues that cases like this one are more…
Descriptors: Foster Care, Child Abuse, Historical Interpretation, Social Justice
Smyth, John – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2016
This paper is both a careful analysis of a seminal piece of work in the sociology of education, as well as a passionate plea to revisit with renewed urgency, the way in which education continues to fail unacceptably large numbers of working-class children. Through closely examining the work of Dennis Marsden (with his colleague Brian Jackson) in…
Descriptors: Educational Sociology, Working Class, Failure, Social Class
Mayo, Peter – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2015
This paper provides a critical exposition and analysis of the work of an acclaimed Italian educator, Lorenzo Milani, and ideas that emerged from his experiences in two Tuscan localities. His work is well known in Italy and many parts of southern Europe. Despite the translations of his works into English and Spanish, in the early 1970s, and their…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Educational History, Teaching Methods, Relevance (Education)
Arauz, Luis – Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 2012
Daisaku Ikeda (1928- ) is a Buddhist leader, peace builder, school founder, and poet. His own biography and lifework provide a model for how one can transform adversity into alternative opportunities for some of the most disenfranchised students. Scrutinizing Ikeda's official website (www.daisakuikeda.org) reveals an extensive collection of his…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Educational Philosophy, Student Centered Curriculum, Transformative Learning
Lipperini, Patricia T. – Religious Education, 2013
Katharine Drexel was an important educator who taught profound lessons to the Roman Catholic Church and American society about the responsibility of privilege and the irresponsibility of prejudice. As a professed nun dedicated to the education of Black and Native Americans, she taught both intentionally and by example. Religious educators, seeking…
Descriptors: Catholics, Religious Education, Churches, Social Responsibility
White, Edie – Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2011
Due to the rise of internet use and a move toward globalization, it may be assumed that white millennial college students are more accepting of cultural diversity and are more likely to be advocates for social justice than generations that have come before them. This project shows that while many white students know how to speak the language of…
Descriptors: White Students, Cultural Pluralism, Social Justice, Preservice Teachers
Armbruster-Sandoval, Ralph – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 2011
This essay explores the life of Alice Greenfield McGrath, a key player in the Sleepy Lagoon Defense Committee and a longtime activist whose involvement in social justice issues spanned eight decades. While best known for her role in the Sleepy Lagoon case in the 1940s, Alice fought the "good fight" for virtually her entire life,…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Jews, War, Social Change
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