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Gilmore, Amir – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
Inspired by jazz's epistemologies and structures, this article was written as a Black liberatory jazz album on Black Boy Joy. Threaded through musical tracks, Black Boy Joy is conceptualized as a Black spiritual Life Force and a liberatory emotional expression that refuses the anti-Black curriculum antagonizing Black boys. Black Boy Joy centers…
Descriptors: Music, Males, Blacks, Aesthetics
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Guillory, Nichole A. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
The article is meant to be a discursive libationary tribute to Audre Lorde's theorizing on Black women's survival. An example of Taliaferro-Baszile's critical race/feminist currere and Pinar's curriculum as complicated conversation, the article brings together Lorde's voice with those of other Black women to analyze my past, present, and future. I…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Critical Theory, Race
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Hernández Adkins, Sean D.; Mock Muñoz de Luna, Lucía I. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
Curriculum studies, like nearly all education scholarship, are predicated on Black suffering and death. Inspired by Christina Sharpe's treatise "In the Wake: On Blackness and Being," we will engage with the difficult questions of what it means to be curriculum theorists inculcated into whiteness and settlement. Pivoting Cheryl Harris's…
Descriptors: Black Studies, Whites, Indigenous Knowledge, Blacks
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Rombalski, Abigail – Curriculum Inquiry, 2020
This article draws from a two-year youth-informed, multi-site ethnographic study, in which interracial anti-racist youth activist groups (IAYAG) amplified their own pedagogical leadership in their schools. The demand for curricular relevance in urban schools is at an all-time high, and the work of youth organizers is in direct opposition to a…
Descriptors: Activism, Racial Bias, Urban Youth, Urban Schools
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Maton, Rhiannon M. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2018
Philadelphia's teacher-led activist group, the Caucus of Working Educators, has displayed shifts in how it frames the central problems facing public education since its emergence in 2014. Initially, the organization tended to advance the notion that neoliberalist discourses and values were primarily responsible for "education reform"…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Racial Bias, Activism, Teacher Associations
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Kean, Eli – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
This article introduces a new theoretical framework comprised of three principles for teaching, learning, and researching gender in a way that celebrates gender diversity and centers transgender experiences and knowledge. The first principle describes how gender operates on multiple levels including individual, institutional, and socio-cultural.…
Descriptors: Student Diversity, Sexual Identity, Gender Bias, Social Bias
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Boveda, Mildred; Reyes, Ganiva; Aronson, Brittany – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
As three teacher educators with familial ties to the Global South, but academically trained within the Global North, we adopt a de/colonial, intersectional feminist lens to analyze the "general education curriculum" in the United States. We use testimonios, each told in first-person, as entry points where we situate the entanglement of…
Descriptors: Females, Minority Group Students, Students with Disabilities, Special Education
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Tien, Joanne – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
In teaching social justice, educators draw from a diverse array of theoretical approaches. In so doing, analytically distinct concepts can get conflated, which significantly impacts student learning, particularly as they relate to teachers' social justice goals. Using ethnography, this paper examines how a social justice educator mobilized a…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Critical Thinking, Feminism, Social Bias
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Rahman, Samiha – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
Black Muslim youth confront antiblackness and Islamophobia in US schools and society, yet few studies examine how this population navigates these intersecting oppressions. In addition, there has been a dearth of scholarly literature that explores the educational spaces in which Black Muslim youth are nurtured and affirmed. This article addresses…
Descriptors: African Americans, Muslims, Religious Schools, Islamic Culture
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Madden, Brooke – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
The author suggests that educators' responses to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada cannot be reduced or reducible to practice without also considering the theories that are enfolded into reconciliatory initiatives and actions. She is guided by the central questions: "How do I understand prevailing constructions of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Theories, Ethics, Indigenous Populations
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El-Sherif, Lucy – Curriculum Inquiry, 2016
Theorizations on Western Muslim identity that are multi-layered and grounded in actual Western Muslim experiences are hard to find. Two exceptions to this are "The Road to Mecca" by Muhammad Asad (1954/2005), and "Islam is a Foreign Country" by Zareena Grewal (2014), rich texts that span across six decades. Asad's classic…
Descriptors: Muslims, Identification (Psychology), Islamic Culture, Islam
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Nieto, Diego; Bickmore, Kathy – Curriculum Inquiry, 2017
This paper discusses findings from focus groups with youth located in underprivileged surroundings in one large multicultural city in Canada and in a moderately large city in Mexico, examining their understandings and lived experiences of migration-related conflicts. Canadian participants framed these conflicts as a problem of racist attitudes…
Descriptors: Immigration, Focus Groups, Disadvantaged, Racial Bias