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Gnanadass, Edith; Merriweather, Lisa R. – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2022
Teaching and learning in times of crisis like the Coronavirus pandemic is less about crisis management and more about humanizing the crisis. Restorying COVID begins with understanding our students and ourselves as whole people, and their multidimensional needs--academic, socio-emotional, and socio-cultural, including racialization, social class,…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, College Faculty, Graduate Students
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Mitoma, Glenn; Marcus, Alan S. – Journal of International Social Studies, 2020
This essay explores the way in which the COVID-19 pandemic has worsened human rights conditions across the globe, particularly around the rise of authoritarianism, erosion of democracy, increase in hate crimes and racism, and deepening of economic inequality. We then advocate for the possibilities and significance of human rights education as a…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Civil Rights, Social Justice
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Soares, Ricardo; Santiago de Mello, Márcia Cristina; Naegele, Rafaela – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
In December 2019, the institutional affirmative action "Onde elas estão?" ("Where are they?") was launched for the mitigation of gender inequality in the STEM disciplines in Brazil, coincidentally in the same period which the first reports of the COVID-19 pandemic appeared in the city of Wuhan, China. Unfortunately, when…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Chemistry
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Yeh, Cathery; Tan, Paulo; Reinholz, Daniel L. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2021
Borders--territorial, economic, political, and ideological--are processes of social division. They monitor and exclude and are regulated, patrolled, and maintained by an array of power regimes, but borderlands are also sites of movement, agency, and resistance. Likewise, mathematics is used as a border that divides and politicizes. In this…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Epistemology, Definitions, Social Justice
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Whitehead, Evangelin – Excellence in Education Journal, 2021
The concept of diversity and inclusion has continued to gain attention and attraction and is a challenging topic in the times of COVID-19. In this pandemic period, all of our systems are totally disturbed including the educational system and all sectors of life get stressed, including our principles and values. Remote teaching and learning process…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing, Online Courses
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Johns, Shantalea; Hawkes, Stephanie – Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in Education, 2020
The present short essay discusses the impact COVID-19 has had on college students. As universities work to build supportive learning environments during these unprecedented times, it is important for practitioners to consider how mental health and student identity impact student success. The framework proposes that empathy, university belonging,…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Empathy, Student School Relationship
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Miles Nash, Angel; Grogan, Margaret – School Leadership & Management, 2022
This article analyses the disaggregated data from the 2020 American Superintendent Decennial Study. The focus on superintendents of colour provides important insight into the ways individuals holding the highest rank in school districts govern the instructional, facilities, fiscal, personnel, and community relations matters as they comprehensively…
Descriptors: Superintendents, Minority Groups, Racial Bias, Ethnicity
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Ziols, Ryan; Kirchgasler, Kathryn L. – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2021
Concerns about health and disease have long pervaded mathematics education research, yet their implications have been underappreciated. This article focuses on three contemporary relationships amplified by the COVID-19 pandemic: (1) school mathematics and national health; (2) mathematics educators' roles in distinguishing the health needs of…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Mathematics Instruction, Public Health
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Shimek, Courtney – Journal of Children's Literature, 2021
Access to green space has always been a social inequity, but the recent global pandemic has exacerbated this injustice for lower-income families even more. Environmental access strengthens mental health, encourages exercise and healthy social habits, and reduces pollution. Many have argued that children not only need play, but they need play in…
Descriptors: Natural Resources, Play, Picture Books, Child Development
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Reed, Cindy J.; Disbrow, Lynn M. – SoJo Journal: Educational Foundations and Social Justice Education, 2020
Female leaders face numerous challenges and barriers beyond the scope of their position, including biases about their leadership style and personal characteristics, isolation and exclusion, and lack of mentoring, among others. The position of university president has typically been held by White males. The numbers of female university presidents…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Females, Women Administrators
American Association of University Women, 2021
Occupational segregation and structural labor market discrimination contribute to significant socioeconomic disparities afflicting Latinas; these inequalities were exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. In April 2020, approximately one in five Latinas were unemployed, registering the highest unemployment rate among all workers. Overall, the Latino…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Employment Level, Experience, Socioeconomic Influences
Hecker, Ian; Spaulding, Shayne; Kuehn, Daniel – Urban Institute, 2021
The acceleration of the shift to online and remote learning and working brings new opportunities, but it also brings the potential for further inequities in the labor market. Older workers stand to benefit greatly from the expanded access that online and remote learning and working provides. This report documents some of the barriers and…
Descriptors: Technological Literacy, Job Skills, Employees, Barriers
Sáenz, Rogelio; Sparks, Corey; Validova, Asiya – Carsey School of Public Policy, 2021
In this brief, authors Rogelio Sáenz, Corey Sparks, and Asiya Validova report that in April 2020, after the first two months of significant spread of COVID-19 in the United States, nearly 25 million fewer people had a job. In June 2021, there were still 5.9 million fewer people employed, representing a drop of 3.7 percent in workers since before…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Employment Level, Unemployment
Washington State Board for Community and Technical Colleges, 2020
Overall, too few students are completing two-year college. Those who complete are still starting off unequally. About one-third of students earning academic degrees do not transfer, but rather go directly to work and find their degree has little value in the labor market. Research suggests they could have benefitted from having marketable skills…
Descriptors: Two Year Colleges, Two Year College Students, Outcomes of Education, Wages
Seusan, Laura Andreea; Maradiegue, Rocío – UNICEF, 2020
Over 11 million cases of coronavirus have been reported in Latin America and the Caribbean. More than seven months after the first case hit Brazil, COVID-19 has deprived 97 per cent of the region's students of their normal schooling. Across the region, the prolonged closure of schools means that 137 million boys and girls continue to miss out on…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Foreign Countries, School Closing
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