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Rachel M. Turner Lindsey – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The purpose of this qualitative study is to better understand how children identify with superheroes to allow counselors to have a basis of understanding to inform their use of superheroes in therapeutic settings. The research questions are: (1) How do children ages 3-6 identify with their favorite superhero? and (2) how is children's self-concept…
Descriptors: Young Children, Self Concept, Teacher Attitudes, Parent Attitudes
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López López, Ligia; Nikey – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2021
Being "in" curriculum is the cry of the "damné" to call for attention to one's existence against the antiblack and antibrown 'weather' in schools. This paper draws from the cry of young people, particularly Black girls to say 'I am here' in curriculum. Drawing from two years of primary/elementary classroom research in the…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Racial Bias, Gender Bias
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Stout, Vanessa; Earnhart, Eric; Nagi, Mariam – Teaching Sociology, 2020
Teaching race and ethnicity in various sociology courses, we found students in our classes can be very reluctant to approach the subject of race, discrimination, and racism. Moreover, during class discussion, they often have a hard time defining and analyzing these concepts. In this study, we examine how popular culture can be a useful tool to…
Descriptors: Race, Ethnicity, Sociology, Racial Bias
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David E. Low – English Journal, 2017
In an era of "colorblind racism," in which race and racism are often suppressed as topics of discussion in classrooms, this article explores how students used comics to invent workarounds for "colormuteness" in their school. Knowing comics are not generally taken seriously, students employed the medium to subversive ends.
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Cartoons, Role Models, Racism
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Ashley K. Dallacqua; David E. Low – English Journal, 2019
Located in the suburbs of a large midwestern city, Trail Middle School serves a predominantly middle-class population. The data the authors feature in this article include group discussions and interviews with students, as well as recordings of in-class lessons, student work, and fieldnotes. The authors focus on the theme of gender as it emerged…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Gender Issues, Gender Bias, Student Attitudes
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Krusemark, Renee C. – Creighton Journal of Interdisciplinary Leadership, 2016
Employers seek college graduates with leadership skills, but studies indicate not all students graduate with leadership ability. Furthermore, an interdisciplinary perspective of leadership implies that leadership learning and ability can be achieved with a variety of methods. This study sought to understand how reading fiction, including comic…
Descriptors: Leadership Qualities, Fiction, Cartoons, Books
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Balis, Andrea; Aman, Michael – Teaching in Higher Education, 2013
Can race and assimilation be taught? Interdisciplinary pedagogy provides a methodology, context, and use of nontraditional texts culled from American cultural history such as from, theater and historical texts. This approach and these texts prove useful for an examination of race and assimilation in America. The paper describes a course that while…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Urban Universities, Race, Popular Culture