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Showing 1 to 15 of 97 results Save | Export
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Sugiharto, Setiono – Applied Linguistics, 2022
This forum article is an attempt to engage in a recent exchange between Figueiredo and Martinez and Kubota whose articles were published in this journal. Bearing out the tenets of the latter author's claims regarding how to confront the dominance of white Euro-American hegemonic knowledge, Figueiredo and Martinez proposed an additional insightful…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Articulation (Speech), Speech Improvement, Epistemology
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Souto-Manning, Mariana; Emerson, Abby C.; Marcel, Gina; Rabadi-Raol, Ayesha; Turner, Adrielle – Review of Research in Education, 2022
Inquiring into the democratization of creative early educational experiences through the lens of the politics of belonging, this review of research asks: What does research reveal about creative early educational experiences as they pertain to history, race, and justice? Seeking to better understand the racialization of creative early educational…
Descriptors: Democracy, Creativity, Early Experience, Educational Experience
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Sappleton, Shan J.; Adams, Doug – Professional Educator, 2022
US education is hardly divorced from systemic societal inequalities. Utilizing the cases of the English-speaking Caribbean and post-apartheid South Africa decolonization efforts, we engage the settler coin concept to interrogate the popular notion that we can achieve systemic change in the US without fundamentally transforming the education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Educational Change, Foreign Policy
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Williams, Kevin – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2021
The argument of this paper is that many texts of the Western literary canon rather than being vehicles of establishment values are critical of these values. Teaching these texts allows educators to challenge the interests of those who hold power in society as well as conventional sexual morality and gender stereotypes. Many important works of…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Literature, Ethnocentrism, Literary Criticism
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Salem, Wesam M.; Tillis, Gina E. – Multicultural Perspectives, 2021
The COVID-19 pandemic has shed light on the vast social-psychological, economic, and political inequities in our society. Education has become even more important than before to counter systemic oppression and institute justice. Parents, students, and educators are thrown into chaos where opportunity and access are diminished and dissipated. This…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Social Justice, Educational Practices, Public Schools
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Summerville, Kiara S.; Campbell, Erica T.; Flantroy, Krystal; Prowell, Ashley Nicole; Shelton, Stephanie Anne – Qualitative Research Journal, 2021
Purpose: Qualitative research consistently centers Eurocentrism through courses' integrations of ontological, epistemological and axiological perspectives. This literal whitewashing was a source of great frustration and confusion for the authors, four Black women, who found their identities omitted and disregarded in qualitative inquiry. Using…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Racial Bias, Collaborative Writing
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Ayala, María Isabel; Ramirez, Christian – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2019
"Coloniality" refers to the patterns of power relations resulting from colonialism that shape racial and ethnic groups' experiences in diverse ways. Although it is known that coloniality influences higher education's physical, symbolic, and social spaces, negatively affecting Latinxs' college attainment, less research has been conducted…
Descriptors: College Students, Hispanic American Students, Student Experience, Power Structure
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Fallace, Thomas – Educational Researcher, 2019
In recent years, researchers have questioned the legitimacy of the so-called myth of learning styles and expressed confusion about exactly when and why the idea first emerged. This historical study traces the origin and emergence of the learning style idea. The author argues that the learning style idea originated in the 1960s as part of a broader…
Descriptors: Ethnocentrism, Racial Bias, Cognitive Style, Cognitive Development
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Sternberg, Robert J.; Desmet, Ophélie Allyssa; Ford, Donna Y.; Gentry, Marcia; Grantham, Tarek C.; Karami, Sareh – Roeper Review, 2021
The field of gifted education, historically and contemporarily, is not well-known for being equitable for underrepresented students, specifically, Black, Hispanic, Native American, among others. In this article, we present a short history of gifted education with attention to key historical figures who have significantly shaped the field; their…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Gifted Education, Educational History, Influences
Mambetaliev, Askar – Online Submission, 2019
The article presents the dimensions of communication in multiethnic and multilingual education settings, the main barriers to sustainable relationships between students of different backgrounds and strategies to overcome those barriers. The main research question of the study is: What are the main barriers in sustainable relationships between…
Descriptors: Barriers, Multilingualism, Sustainability, Cultural Pluralism
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Cormier, Christopher J.; Boveda, Mildred; Aladejebi, Funké; Gathoni, Alice – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2021
Black teachers in Canada, Kenya, and the United States share how they have supported minoritized students, even as they themselves experienced marginalizing societal forces, and delineate three guiding principles for affirming the social-emotional and mental health needs of all learners.
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, African American Teachers, Social Development, Emotional Development
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Kits, Gerda J. – International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2019
Indigenous scholars argue that reconciliation requires educators to make space for Indigenous perspectives in the curriculum. This article agrees, arguing that Christians who are committed to Wolterstorff's (2004) concept of "educating for shalom" must work towards decolonization of the educational system. Eurocentrism in the current…
Descriptors: Christianity, Indigenous Knowledge, Ethnocentrism, Postcolonialism
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Johnson, Willa M. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2016
This essay explores classroom dynamics when students identify and connect their own painful experiences to structural racism or ethnocentrism exhibited in the Holocaust or parts of Jewish history. The intrusion of this proximal knowledge can be an obstacle to student learning. If engaged by professors, however, I argue that proximal knowledge can…
Descriptors: Jews, History Instruction, European History, Racial Bias
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Fallace, Thomas – American Educational Research Journal, 2015
Child-centered pedagogy is at the ideological core of progressive education. The simple idea that the child rather than the teacher or textbook should be the major focus of the classroom is, perhaps, the single most enduring educational idea of the era. In this historical study, the author argues that child-centered education emerged directly from…
Descriptors: Learner Controlled Instruction, Educational History, Progressive Education, Educational Theories
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Kershen, Julianna Lopez – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2018
Based on experiences teaching a middle grades literacy course for pre-service teachers, this "Voices from the Field" article examines how challenging texts provoke adult learners to more closely attend to their reading experiences. By engaging with difficult texts, pre-service teachers experience frustration and confusion while reading.…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Metacognition, Adult Learning, Protocol Analysis
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