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Stoddard, Jeremy; Tunstall, Jonathan; Walker, Leila; Wight, Emily – Journal of Media Literacy Education, 2021
Current popular media literacy programs overemphasize the verifiability, reliability, and expertise of sources over the analysis of how marginalized groups are represented. This analysis privileges traditional news sources -- and a hierarchy of "objective" news. These same institutions have been historically responsible for producing and…
Descriptors: Media Literacy, Mass Media Effects, News Reporting, Credibility
Museus, Samuel D. – Teachers College Record, 2021
Context: Systemic oppression is one of the most pressing problems in U.S. society. However, relatively little is known about the process by which college students become committed to social justice agendas. In addition, systematic empirical inquiries that examine how Asian American students, in particular, develop such commitments are difficult to…
Descriptors: Asian American Students, College Students, Racial Bias, Social Justice
Hess, Juliet – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2021
Music educators and music education researchers often rely on the use of story when advocating for social change. We may use story to illustrate a need for resources, point to a systemic injustice, illustrate a need for policy change, or identify an exclusion. Allies often utilize stories of oppression to demonstrate the untenability of situations…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Social Justice, Music Education, Educational Change
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
Irwin, Laura N. – Journal of Leadership Education, 2021
Critical and justice-oriented approaches to leadership are incomplete without attention to racism and racialization. This study employed basic qualitative inquiry to examine racialized legitimation within student affairs leadership education through lenses of whiteness as property and legitimacy. Findings detail how leadership educators sought to…
Descriptors: Student Personnel Services, Student Personnel Workers, Leadership, Professional Education
Keenlyside, Emily – Journal of Museum Education, 2021
As art museums increasingly commit to socially engaged practices that require critical ways of engaging with artworks, collaborators, and visitors, what does gallery educators' ongoing learning look like, and what motivates it? How does it inform or respond to change? Drawing on research with freelance gallery educators in Scotland, this article…
Descriptors: Arts Centers, Museums, Art Teachers, Volunteers
Pillay, Thashika; Ahn, Claire; Gyamerah, Kenneth; Liu, Shuyuan – London Review of Education, 2022
The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in a drastic transformation to schooling for students throughout the world. During this period, a number of issues arose in our local, national and global communities, including the death of George Floyd and subsequent protests and rallies organised by #BlackLivesMatter. Living through and witnessing many social…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Social Justice, Social Media, Ethics
Slate, Nico – History of Education, 2022
In the early 1960s, colleges and universities in the United States launched dozens of new pre-college programmes for low-income and predominantly African American high school students. Many of these initiatives were inspired by the civil rights movement. Moved by the sit-ins, marches and boycotts that had riveted the nation, a range of educators…
Descriptors: Educational History, Economically Disadvantaged, Self Concept, Civil Rights
Kitchen, Julian; Brown, Natalie – Studying Teacher Education, 2022
This collaborative self-study begins with the critical incident that led a collaborative relationship between a relatively privileged teacher educator and a racialized teacher candidate. The teacher candidate, serving as a critical friend, helped the teacher educator become aware of his blind spots and enhanced his critical awareness and practices…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Advantaged, Preservice Teachers, Racial Attitudes
Baldridge, Bianca J. – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2020
This paper examines how Black community-based youth workers navigate anti-Black racism in their educational programming with Black youth in a majority white college town widely recognized as 'nice,' 'liberal,' and 'progressive' with stark racial disparities between its Black and white residents. With racial liberalism and BlackCrit as theoretical…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Youth Programs, Caseworkers, African American Students
Sinha, Shilpi; Rasheed, Shaireen – Teachers College Record, 2020
Background: We are at a historical juncture that is punctuated by the rise of white nationalism, an exacerbation of racial divisions and tensions, an uptick in hate crimes, and bullying increasingly targeting immigrant youth, all of which, in the current political and cultural climate, have often been legitimized through a recourse to…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Racial Bias, Racial Discrimination, Teacher Educators
Milner, H. Richard, IV – Reading Research Quarterly, 2020
The author poses racialized questions and issues about the science of reading to address and disrupt implicit and overt racist practices in producing and disseminating knowledge. Roles, complexities, nuances, and challenges related to racial identity, special education lenses, and motivation are explored to reimagine how we conceptualize,…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Reading Research, Racial Identification, Special Education
Leung, Sofia Y.; López-McKnight, Jorge R. – Communications in Information Literacy, 2020
"Critical Library Instruction: Theories and Methods" dangerously lacked a centering, and critique, of white supremacy, as a structure of domination; we see the continuation of that active avoidance, or a progress approach through liberal or multicultural frameworks that do not precisely identify roots of racialized oppression, in…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, Whites, Racial Bias
Ndumu, Ana; Chancellor, Renate – Journal of Education for Library and Information Science, 2021
This article revisits Rosemary DuMont's 1986 articles on Black librarianship and racial attitudes in LIS. The first part addresses missing or limited coverage on the library schools at five historically Black colleges and universities: Alabama A&M University, Clark Atlanta University, University of the District of Columbia, Hampton University,…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Library Education, Information Science Education, Racial Discrimination
Tanchuk, Nicolas; Rocha, Tomas; Kruse, Marc – Harvard Educational Review, 2021
The concept of privilege is widely used in social justice education to denote unearned advantages accrued by members of dominant groups through the oppression of subordinate groups. In this conceptual essay, Nicolas Tanchuk, Tomas Rocha, and Marc Kruse argue that an atomistic conception of advantage implicit in the discourse of privilege supports…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Multicultural Education, African American Education, American Indian Education