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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
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Justin A. Gutzwa – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2024
Literature exploring postsecondary undergraduate student experiences at the nexus of queerness, trans*ness, and Indigeneity remains relatively scant, as does scholarship taking a geospatial lens to understand the experiences of trans* collegians. Given the settler colonial history of higher education as a field and the colonial nature of the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Sexuality, LGBTQ People, Indigenous Populations
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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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Reisman, Abby; Jay, Lightning – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2022
Despite decades of research to the contrary, public discourse continues to insist on the direct power of curriculum to shape student learning, rather than acknowledge the complex and situated ways that teachers and curricular materials interact to shape enacted instruction. In this paper, we use a model of curriculum enactment to illustrate the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, History Instruction, United States History, African American History
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Brittany L. Jones – Multicultural Perspectives, 2024
In recent years, under the guise of anti-CRT legislation, politicians nationwide have attempted, and at times succeeded, in prohibiting the teaching of race and racism in PK-12 public schools. Although these laws target a theory not taught in elementary and secondary schools, too often the voices and feelings of caregivers from marginalized…
Descriptors: African American Students, African Americans, Caregivers, Caregiver Attitudes
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Bass, John B., III – Research and Issues in Music Education, 2023
Increasing diversity and equity in secondary and college music programs is a common thread in the scholarship across disciplines in the field. While crucial work is being done to decolonize curricula broadly, students often express difficulty relating to formal music study and teachers struggle to balance desires to diversify repertoire and…
Descriptors: Music Education, Racism, Equal Education, Teaching Methods
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Marcus W. Johnson; Daniel Thomas III – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2024
Black experiences and discourse concerning citizenship are unique. Moreover, Black access to full citizenship is often a matter of life and death. The civic purposes driving this pursuit are often negated in conventional curriculum and pedagogy, especially in early childhood settings. Still, it is essential for educators and policymakers to…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Males, Grade 1, Grade 2
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Conner, Caroline J. – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2023
Latinxs are the fastest growing student population in U.S. schools, yet they are largely omitted from the social studies curriculum. Curricular exclusion fosters feelings of alienation in Latinx students, who do not see themselves represented in the history that is taught. The current study investigates the representation of Latinxs, immigrants,…
Descriptors: Social Studies, United States History, History Instruction, State Standards
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Animashaun, Oluwaseun; Sealey-Ruiz, Yolanda – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2023
Amid a pandemic, protests (on masking and mattering), and presidential campaigns in 2020, adults and young folx alike were wading through an exhaustive socio-political milieu, that called for speculation. In this study, students had the opportunity to practice their writing and analytical skills while developing their racial literacy -- the…
Descriptors: Race, Racism, Females, Knowledge Level
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Bonnie Lewis; Ryan M. Crowley – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2024
The authors analyzed three Advanced Placement U.S. History textbooks' narratives of U.S. 20th century social democratic policies (e.g. New Deal, G.I. Bill, pro-suburbanization policies) using Lipsitz's "possessive investment in whiteness" as a theoretical framework. The authors found texts portrayed the exclusion of Black populations…
Descriptors: Advanced Placement Programs, United States History, Textbooks, Textbook Content
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Tamara L. Shreiner; Christopher C. Martell – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2024
Data visualizations, including timelines, maps, and graphs, are often used to present social and political information in the media. Students need to learn how to make sense of data visualizations and recognize when they are being used to mislead, or when they advance white supremacist views. In this study, we used critical race analysis to…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Instructional Materials, History Instruction, Racism
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Okello, Wilson Kwamogi – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2023
Using the chokehold as a theoretical framework to analyze the gendered and sexualized vulnerabilities of Black males, I place historical records in conversation with the temporal moment, particularly the allegations of sexual violence committed against Black males at the University of Michigan. In doing so, I conducted a critical discourse…
Descriptors: African Americans, Males, Sexual Abuse, Violence
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Leah N. Fulton – Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education, 2023
This conceptual article identifies the ways that the seventeenth-century slave code, "partus sequitur ventrem" (PSV), "the child follows the mother" is a functioning allochronism that undergirds the treatment of Black mothers in contemporary institutions of higher education. Through conceptualizing three functions of PSV,…
Descriptors: Mothers, College Environment, Racism, Gender Bias
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Wilson, Alison; Brezicha, Kristina F. – Peabody Journal of Education, 2023
In the aftermath of the Capitol Insurrection, many states sought to bolster civic education through efforts such as the South Dakota Civics and History Initiative (SDCHI). This study examined the SDCHI through a Critical Policy Analysis and Critical Race Theory lens to understand how the initiative and related rhetoric reflected, protected, and…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Criticism, Policy Analysis, Educational Policy
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Okello, Wilson Kwamogi; Duran, Antonio A.; Pierce, Eva – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2023
In an interview with Randall Kenan, Octavia E. Butler extracts the harsh realities of history and its effects on the present, stating, "I couldn't let her come back whole… Antebellum slavery didn't leave people quite whole." (Kenan, Callaloo, 1991, 14, p. 498). This quote refers to her book, Kindred (1979) in which the protagonist, Dana,…
Descriptors: Slavery, Racism, Higher Education, Individual Development
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Christine R. Privott; Daryl R. Privott – American Association for Adult and Continuing Education, 2023
This project aims to gain a new understanding of redlining and the nature of how human beings occupy their time. Redlining was/is government sanctioned discriminatory race-based exclusionary tactics in real estate. Occupational science and adult learning tenets support the idea that how we occupy our time matters; Black Americans could not buy…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Racism, African Americans, Occupations
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