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Case, Jennifer M.; Heydenrych, Hilton; Kotta, Linda; Marshall, Delia; McKenna, Sioux; Williams, Kevin – Studies in Higher Education, 2017
Academic development is a recent project in the university, intended to enable the university to respond to the needs of a more diverse student body. In South Africa, such work arose during late apartheid, and has now moved to a more central institutional position advocating responsiveness in the light of the educational disparities that are the…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Racial Segregation
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Carter, Prudence L.; Skiba, Russell; Arredondo, Mariella I.; Pollock, Mica – Urban Education, 2017
Racial/ethnic stereotypes are deep rooted in our history; among these, the dangerous Black male stereotype is especially relevant to issues of differential school discipline today. Although integration in the wake of "Brown v. Board of Education" was intended to counteract stereotype and bias, resegregation has allowed little true…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Stereotypes, Discipline, Desegregation Litigation
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Lareau, Annette; Jo, Hyejeong – American Educational Research Journal, 2017
This article is a commentary on "Unwrapping the Suburban "Package Deal": Race, Class, and School Access," by Anna Rhodes and Siri Warkentien. Although guided by powerful ideals of equal opportunity, American schools are deeply unequal. As historians of education have taught, children of different racial, ethnic, and class…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Racial Bias, Social Bias, Social Class
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Grande, Sandy; Anderson, Lauren – Multicultural Perspectives, 2017
This essay begins by naming liberal forms of multiculturalism as a complicit discourse and theory in the erasure of Indigenous peoples. For example, it troubles the false narrative of the United States as a "nation of immigrants," offered up so frequently as a corrective to the current administration's divisive rhetoric and policies. The…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Immigration
Richardson, Joan – Phi Delta Kappan, 2017
The NAACP, nation's largest civil rights organization, steps up its opposition to charter schools just as a president and new education secretary appear ready to kick the sector into high gear. In 2016, the NAACP passed a resolution calling on a moratorium on the expansion of charter schools, citing concerns about transparency and accountability,…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, African American Students, Student Needs, Equal Education
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Taylor, Kendra; Frankenberg, Erica – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
Political boundaries have historically been used to both segregate and integrate populations by social characteristics. Researchers have investigated the concentration of poverty, yet less attention has been given to the concentration of affluence, despite growing income segregation of the affluent from middle and low-income households. While the…
Descriptors: Metropolitan Areas, Socioeconomic Status, Income, School Segregation
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Allen, Ricky Lee; Liou, Daniel D. – Urban Education, 2019
Judge Robert Carter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) argued that White supremacy is the leading cause of de facto segregation. However, White supremacy is still undertheorized in educational leadership. Through the lens of Charles Mills' racial contract, this article interprets a controversy surrounding…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Social Attitudes, Whites, Social Bias
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Ndimande, Bekisizwe S.; Neville, Helen A. – Urban Education, 2018
Data suggest that having a positive, internalized racial identity is related to healthy outcomes. Although some scholars have highlighted the role of education in providing a context to develop such an identity, there is a dearth of research in this area. This study analyzed racial life narrative interviews with 15 Black South Africans to explore…
Descriptors: Blacks, Racial Identification, Foreign Countries, Activism
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Pogodzinski, Ben; Lenhoff, Sarah Winchell; Addonizio, Michael F. – Educational Review, 2018
As US public education enrolment grows increasingly diverse, school choice policies create opportunities to break the link between residential and school segregation. They also create new pathways for families to self-segregate into ever more racially isolated schools. This study explores student enrolment patterns in Metro Detroit over a ten-year…
Descriptors: Open Enrollment, Educational Policy, School Policy, School Choice
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Yoon, Ee-Seul; Daniels, Lyn D. – Educational Policy, 2021
Little is known about the school choice practices of Aboriginal families in settler-colonial societies, where they have been removed from their ancestral lands and/or have been subjected to discriminatory educational policies. Through the lens of settler-colonial theory, this study elucidates the "spatially positioned" school choice…
Descriptors: School Choice, Land Settlement, Canada Natives, American Indians
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Geduld, Deidre; Sathorar, Heloise; Mdzanga, Nokhanyo N. – Language and Intercultural Communication, 2021
Student teachers in South Africa need to realise that although their classrooms are multilingual and multicultural, English remains the dominant language. Preparing student teachers for diverse classrooms require a pedagogical approach that will enable them to be agents of social change. This view supports transformative ideals in teacher…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Critical Theory
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Garton, Paul M.; Wawrzynski, Matthew R. – Journal of College Student Development, 2021
Student affairs and student engagement are becoming important mechanisms for social change within South African tertiary education. We explored the relationship between student involvement in cocurricular activities and learning outcomes related to collective leadership for social change. Data were collected via a survey of 1,309 students that…
Descriptors: Social Change, Student Personnel Services, Learner Engagement, Higher Education
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Leonard, Jacqueline; Walker, Erica N.; Bloom, Victoria R.; Joseph, Nicole M. – Journal of Urban Mathematics Education, 2020
In this chapter, the authors use Black Feminist Thought (BFT) to examine the mathematics education and the educational attainment of African American females in a matrilineal line that spans five generations. A cross analysis of school experiences, from a maternal great-great-grandmother to her great-great-granddaughter, reveal a portrait of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Educational Attainment, African Americans, Females
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McCardle, Todd – Educational Considerations, 2020
Using a Critical Race Theory framework, this manuscript examines the scholarly literature on the intersection of tracking and its historical use as a method for establishing and maintaining racial segregation in American public schools. I begin by exploring accounts of tracking in American public educational institutions as researched by…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, Racial Bias, Track System (Education)
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Givens, Jarvis R. – American Educational Research Journal, 2019
This article analyzes Carter G. Woodson's iconic Negro History Week and its impact on Black schools during Jim Crow. Negro History Week introduced knowledge on Afro-diasporic history and culture to schools around the country. As a result of teachers' grassroots organizing, it became a cultural norm in Black schools by the end of the 1930s. This…
Descriptors: African American History, African American Students, Racial Bias, Racial Segregation
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