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Johnson, Alisha – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
This study considers the role of apprenticeships in the education of Louisiana's gens de couleur libres during the early nineteenth century. Although Louisiana was a slave society, demand for skilled labor in the taming of eighteenth-century Louisiana allowed Africans to be cast not merely as brute labor, but as an adept workforce. Such conditions…
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Educational History, United States History, African American History
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Kang, Jiyoung – American Educational History Journal, 2020
"International education" in the United States has been dominated by nationalism that advocates such understanding primarily for the purpose of improving economic and military competitiveness with other nations (Parker 2008). Nevertheless, although they represent a minority voice, there have been researchers and educators who argue that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Textbooks, Textbook Content, World History
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Rodríguez, Noreen Naseem – Curriculum Inquiry, 2020
Difficult histories that may contradict national values are rarely taught in elementary schools. This comparative study of two elementary educators examines their pedagogical approaches to the teaching of Japanese American incarceration as difficult history. Framed by Asian American critical race theory, the teachers' practices revealed challenges…
Descriptors: War, Japanese Americans, United States History, Elementary School Students
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Coles, Justin A.; Powell, Tunette – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2020
Through an analysis of Black urban high school youth's critical engagements with literacy, the authors examine school suspensions--particularly disproportionality--as anti-Black symbolic violence. By historically mapping the terrain of discipline, from chattel slavery to "The New Jim Crow," the article unearths the connection between…
Descriptors: African American Students, Suspension, Disproportionate Representation, Racial Bias
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Coloma, Roland Sintos – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2020
Drawing insights primarily from Ethnic Studies, this essay is broken into the following components: outlining the elusive task of defining urban; delineating three decolonizing moves in relation to representation, structure, and affect; and ending with the ongoing struggles for Ethnic Studies in PK-12 schools and higher education. The goal is to…
Descriptors: Urban Education, Urban Schools, Social Influences, Foreign Policy
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Johnson, Stacy C. – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2020
This study presents an examination of the institution of American slavery as it relates to current hegemonic issues in education, revealing a persistence of slave trade ideology through education and challenging the slow and possibly deliberate progress to close the Achievement Gap/Debt.
Descriptors: United States History, Slavery, African American History, Achievement Gap
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Bair, Sarah – Social Studies, 2020
This article examines coverage in social studies curriculum and U.S. history textbooks, specifically, of women in the American Civil Rights Movement (CRM) and considers how social studies teachers can broaden the narrative they teach to include more gender-related issues and the work of women activists. The author found that despite a rich body of…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Females, Sex Role, Social Studies
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Thomas, Ebony Elizabeth; Coleman, James Joshua; Cicchino, Lindsay R. – Social Education, 2018
Metanarratives--stories that are told and retold over time, so that they become the story--have proven instrumental in cultivating conceptions of the Founders as invariably honest, brave, and ethical. A prime example is the tale of George Washington confessing that he chopped down the cherry tree. While this narrative crafted an image of…
Descriptors: Slavery, Public Opinion, Presidents, Misconceptions
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O'Brien, Joseph; Mitchell, Phil – Social Studies, 2018
As de Tocqueville recognized, the U.S. democratic system relies on the advocacy of civic-minded individuals. Although U.S. history is replete with persons using different means to advance one or more democratic principles, VanSledright and Hess argued that secondary history education reinforces a persistent national narrative, one characterized by…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Ethnic Groups, United States History, Secondary School Students
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Bilginsoy, Cihan – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2018
The author estimates the impacts of the local rate of unemployment and the Great Recession on the quit and graduation rates of the U.S. construction trade apprentices over the 2001-2014 period. Trade union participation in training sponsorship had a strong influence on attrition rates. The impacts of the business cycle and the Great Recession on…
Descriptors: Unemployment, Apprenticeships, Economic Climate, Business
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Stevens, Mitchell L. – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2018
The conclusion of World War II created anxiety about how to accommodate the return of millions of veterans and spurred the passage of the Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944--the GI Bill--that would ultimately send two million people to college. But in 1946, the second year of Truman's Presidency, there was an even larger political question. The…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Politics of Education, Educational History, United States History
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Gunn, Dennis – American Educational History Journal, 2018
Rapid changes in American society in the early twentieth century fostered both a general sense of optimism for America's future and a perceived sense of moral dislocation affecting present and future generations of America's youth. Urbanization, modernization, and the increasing presence of immigrant populations were often viewed as challenges to…
Descriptors: Moral Development, Values Education, United States History, Political Attitudes
Rosiek, Jerry – Phi Delta Kappan, 2019
The nation's greatest anti-racist education policy -- school desegregation -- has proven no match for the adaptations of institutionalized racism. Over the last 40 years, school segregation has evolved and reemerged in housing patterns, school zoning policy, and curricular tracking. This has led to calls for new solutions to the problem of racial…
Descriptors: School Segregation, School Desegregation, Racial Bias, Educational History
Cordell, Michael D. – ProQuest LLC, 2019
The purpose of this study was to examine how students used the elements of a historical argument to interpret how equality and opportunity affected marginalized groups in a given historical era. To do this, 150 eighth grade students wrote thirteen historical arguments, and submitted a written portfolio of their work at the end of the school year.…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, Persuasive Discourse, Grade 8
Bernath, Elizabeth – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2016
This paper discusses Mary Wollstonecraft's "A Vindication of the Rights of Woman: With Strictures on Political and Moral Subjects" and "A Vindication of the Rights of Men" as books of philosophy about rational materialism. Based on an analysis of Lockean thought, as applied to the possibility of women's development of reason,…
Descriptors: Authors, Females, Education, Feminism
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