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Ridley, Linda L. – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The value of business school pedagogy has received increased attention in recent years (Delgado and Stefancic, 1992; Giacalone and Wargo, 2009; Podolny, 2009; Grier & Poole, 2020; Prieto & Phipps, 2021). This qualitative study examined the ability of higher education business faculty to include chattel slavery in the history of American…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Faculty, Slavery, United States History
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Duncan, Kristen E. – Multicultural Education, 2021
On a fall Thursday afternoon, the author sat with students, who were preservice social studies teachers, and discussed approaches to teaching slavery to high school students. As the discussion continued, the author began to ask about their experiences learning about the institution of chattel slavery in the United States South. During this…
Descriptors: Field Trips, Slavery, History Instruction, Race
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Holst, John D. – Adult Education Quarterly: A Journal of Research and Theory, 2020
This article is an effort to build on academic theories of race and antiracist education. Using a Gramscian theoretical framework that emphasizes perspectives from organic intellectuals, this article puts the academic literature on race and adult education in conversation with the theory generated on race from select U.S. working-class organic…
Descriptors: Race, Racial Bias, Social Justice, Adult Education
Chalmers, Jennifer – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Social studies teachers in the United States are often unprepared or hesitant to teach about race and racism. This is especially true among White teachers. If teachers are to teach American history, they must be prepared to teach about race and racism, starting with the construction of race in Colonial America and continuing to emphasize the…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Racism, Slavery, United States History
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Patterson, Timothy; Shuttleworth, Jay – Teachers College Record, 2019
Context: Elementary teachers will make difficult pedagogical choices when selecting materials to support their students' learning about historical topics. Given the variety of historical books written for their students, certain stories will be emphasized and ultimately legitimated and others will be silenced through absence. Objective of Study:…
Descriptors: Slavery, United States History, Misconceptions, History Instruction
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Current, Cheris Brewer; Tillotson, Emily – Gender and Education, 2018
This paper follows one small, Christian university's five-year experience with student charity date auctions. The contemporary re-emergence of date auctions represents a backlash against gender and racial progress. Student leaders believe that in a post-racial and post-sexist society, race and gender are decontextualised neutral elements of…
Descriptors: Colleges, Gender Bias, Racial Bias, Dating (Social)
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Anthony-Stevens, Vanessa; Boysen-Taylor, Rebekka; Doucette, Benjamin – Journal of Research in Rural Education, 2022
This study is about a seventh-grade classroom in a predominantly White region in the rural northwestern United States where a White teacher led an interdisciplinary unit on African American narratives of enslavement and freedom fighting. Through the lenses of racial literacy, critical Whiteness studies, and discourse studies, authors use data from…
Descriptors: Grade 7, Whites, White Teachers, Rural Schools
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Coles, Justin A. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2020
Curriculum within the US was birthed in a context of antiblackness and continues to operate as anti-Black through imagining Black youth as less than and uneducable. However, despite the ways educational space has historically worked to image Black children and communities through deficit lenses, the creation of non-traditional Black curricular…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Blacks, Curriculum, Critical Theory
Bell, Thomas H., III. – ProQuest LLC, 2019
National data indicated approximately 80 percent of the teaching force is white while the student population continues to become increasingly racially diverse. Teacher education programs continue to graduate and recommend for licensure a disproportionate number of white teachers. Research indicates overwhelmingly pre-service teachers suffer from a…
Descriptors: Whites, Student Diversity, Disproportionate Representation, Cultural Differences
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James-Gallaway, ArCasia D. – Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 2019
This paper uses Derrick Bell's interest convergence principle, which argues that whites will support racial justice efforts only if they believe they will see gains for themselves, to examine white philanthropic support of Black education in the postbellum South and in current school reforms. Using the concept of "bad" (or compromising)…
Descriptors: Private Financial Support, Whites, African American Education, Geographic Regions
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Coles, Justin A. – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2019
In this article, I examine how the permanent structure of antiblackness has been invisibilized by neoliberal multiculturalism. Neoliberalism in the U.S. works to disappear and disconnect Black history and suffering from the consciousness of American citizens, which causes schools and society to ineffectively address contemporary racial issues, as…
Descriptors: African American History, African Americans, African American Students, Critical Theory
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Castro, Eliana; Presberry, Cierra B.; Venzant Chambers, Terah T. – Journal of Research on Leadership Education, 2019
This conceptual analysis centers two historical periods in which Black communities in the United States secured educational rights for themselves in spite of (not because of) intervention from the federal government. Drawing from the Critical Race Theory, the authors argue that Reconstruction and the post-"Brown" era offer valuable…
Descriptors: United States History, War, African American History, Educational History
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Howard, Joy – New Educator, 2018
In this article, I explore this question: How can teachers, especially new teachers, create school spaces that present humanizing images and stories of people who were enslaved, particularly people of African descent in the United States? To explore this question, drawing from an ethnographic study of teachers at an elementary school in the U.S.…
Descriptors: Slavery, Personal Narratives, Memory, Elementary Education
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Chin, Jeremiah; Bustamante, Nicholas; Solyom, Jessica Ann; Brayboy, Bryan McKinley Jones – Theory Into Practice, 2016
In 2007, the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma amended its constitution to limit membership to only those who can trace lineal descent to an individual listed as "Cherokee by Blood" on the final Dawes Rolls. This exercise of sovereignty paradoxically ties the Dawes Rolls, the colonial instruments used to divide the lands and peoples of the…
Descriptors: American Indians, Tribes, Self Determination, African Americans
Lathan, Jamie L. – ProQuest LLC, 2013
While the distortions and omissions in traditional U. S. history textbook accounts of slavery have been well documented (Alexander, 2002; Brown & Brown, 2010; Banks, 1969; Council on Interracial Books for Children, 1977; Elson, 1964; Gordy & Pritchard, 1995; Kane, 1970; Kochlin, 1998; Washburn, 1997), no study has analyzed digital U. S.…
Descriptors: Textbooks, United States History, Slavery, Textbook Content
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