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Natasha N. Johnson – School Leadership & Management, 2024
Historically, there remains an underrepresentation of Black women in and en route to the highest levels of organisational leadership. The divide is all the more pronounced in the field of education, one in which women represent a large share of the community. Particularly relevant for Black women is the incongruence between their heightened…
Descriptors: Racism, Social Justice, Women Administrators, African Americans
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Mishack T. Gumbo; Christopher B. Knaus; Velisiwe G. Gasa – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
Despite revolutions, ongoing student protests, and long-standing transformational efforts, African higher education remains steeped in a colonial model, with current structures, approaches, and purposes paralleling Western universities. The doctorate, the highest level of formal education one can attain, reflects this commitment to Western…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Doctoral Programs, Doctoral Students, Decolonization
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Fikile Nxumalo; Joanne Peers – Global Studies of Childhood, 2024
In this article, we enact a partial cartographic storying of reconceptualist turns in our work. We do this by situating ourselves in relation to each other and our work across time as a mode of tracing the (situated) possibilities that these turns have enacted for children-in-relation with worlds. In enacting this dialogic and cartographic…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Educational Practices, Cartography, Decolonization
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Elizabeth Bifuh-Ambe – Thresholds in Education, 2024
This article describes how a secularized version of Lectio Divina is used within the classroom as a model for engaging in anti-racism and social justice discussions. Lectio Divina is an ancient tool for understanding texts. From its religious beginnings, it has been adapted to its secular forms for critical contemplative practice in twenty…
Descriptors: Racism, Social Justice, Empowerment, Advocacy
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Mara Lee Grayson – Journal of Literacy Research, 2024
Literacy studies scholarship and pedagogy have not attended comprehensively to Jewish cultural literacies or the discursive operations of anti-Jewish hate. As a result, antisemitic rhetoric may be employed, strategically or accidentally, by people who do not see themselves as antisemitic--and who, regardless of their critical and cultural…
Descriptors: Jews, Social Discrimination, Cultural Literacy, Social Justice
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Arianna Trott; Tanupreet Suri; Thomas A. Chávez – Counselor Education and Supervision, 2024
Counselor education needs innovative approaches to research that align with counseling values including the multicultural social justice counseling competencies. Community-based participatory research can be used as an approach to bridge gaps in research and promote equity, social justice competencies, and ethical standards in the field of…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Counselor Training, Social Justice, Competence
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Suriamurthee M. Maistry – Transformation in Higher Education, 2024
Post-colonial higher education contexts experience a never-ending recuperation from the multiple violences imposed by colonisation. Coloniality has largely been successful in maintaining a hegemonic hold by white settler colonisers in various facets of higher education despite attempts to decolonise this sector and attempts at transformation. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Neoliberalism, Colonialism
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Sophia Seifert; Maia B. Cucchiara – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2024
In recent decades, school choice has become a characteristic feature of urban school systems and, like students, teachers must choose among schools with various characteristics. Such decisions become new sites for teachers to enact their professional identity. This study uses qualitative data to explore the identity negotiations of 26 teachers…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, School Choice, Professional Identity, Social Justice
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Tyler Derreth – Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning, 2024
With the continued growth in online education, higher education institutions have moved community engagement further into virtual spaces through e-service learning courses (Faulconer, 2021). These courses have a history of being client-based, rather than critical or transformational (Strait & Nordyke, 2015). I argue that this conception of…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Electronic Learning, Service Learning, Teaching Methods
Elizabeth A. Tetu – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Although scholarship has shown that new teachers struggle to make the transition to in-service teaching and enact the progressive practices that they learned during pre-service preparation, little research has explored how first-year teachers develop a justice-oriented practice during this transition. This project centers on a critical learning…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Teaching Experience, Beginning Teachers, Barriers
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Sara Wilf; Laura Wray-Lake – Journal of Adolescent Research, 2024
This paper describes forms of online youth civic engagement that center the experiences of youth with historically marginalized identities and documents ways that youth are civically engaged. Twenty U.S.-based, digitally active youth ages 16 to 21 years old were interviewed. Seven participants (35%) identified as female, nine (45%) as male, and…
Descriptors: Late Adolescents, Social Networks, Social Media, Citizen Participation
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Genevieve Alice Woolverton; Amy K. Marks – Journal of Adolescent Research, 2024
We propose an integrative model for the development of anti-racism in white adolescents that unpacks and combines critical consciousness, color consciousness, anti-racism, and Critical Race Theory frameworks. Black and Brown youth in the U.S. face increasing rates of peer-directed racism, which contribute to long-term negative physical,…
Descriptors: Racism, Whites, Adolescents, Consciousness Raising
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Jim Carlson; Yuko Iwai; Heidi Masters; Fanica Young – International Journal of Learning Technology, 2024
Pre-service teacher (PST) field placements often occur in homogeneous classrooms. Simulated classrooms are emerging as a complementary context for implementing new skills with culturally, linguistically, and socioeconomically diverse students. Previous studies have explored PSTs' perceptions or provided quantitative findings of their culturally…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Preservice Teachers, Culturally Relevant Education, Teaching Methods
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Charlene Montaño Nolan; Carolyn Brennan; Tasha Tropp Laman – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2024
This study examined the potential role of critical reflection as a tool to support pre-service early childhood teacher interns in understanding and questioning pedagogical choices witnessed in their preschool internships while developing their own socially responsible teaching capacity. This study contributes to the field of critical reflection in…
Descriptors: Reflection, Preservice Teachers, Preschool Teachers, Teacher Interns
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Maiya A. Turner; Miriam Sanders – Journal of Urban Learning, Teaching, and Research, 2024
Foundational principles of formal math language in mathematics classrooms are necessary for students' ability to succeed academically. However, cultural dialects such as Black language are vilified within the scope of education, particularly in mathematics education, despite evidence that acknowledging students' cultural and linguistic backgrounds…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, African American Students, Language Usage, Black Dialects
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