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Kathryn R. Klement – American Journal of Sexuality Education, 2024
Traditional commercial textbooks at the college level are slow to update, often have problematic language or content related to queer and trans identities, and are likely to be prohibitively expensive. As an alternative, I explore the benefits of using open educational resources (OER) and free-to-access resources for a human sexuality course. I…
Descriptors: Open Educational Resources, Inclusion, Textbooks, Textbook Content
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Jordan the Social Worker – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2025
Debates over the nature of social work education are not new. What is new, however, comes from the Council on Social Work Education's (CSWE) injection of critical pedagogy into social work education through "anti-racist" and "anti-oppressive" competencies laid out in the 2022 Educational Policy and Accreditation Standards…
Descriptors: Racism, Social Justice, Social Work, Values Education
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Ashley R. Moore; James Coda; Julia Donnelly Spiegelman; Melisa Cahnmann-Taylor – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2024
Cisgender and heterosexual norms permeate every level of language classrooms, from textbooks to classroom discourse to teachers' actions, constraining queer/trans learners' ability to be themselves. Yet queer/trans and non-queer/trans learners alike may challenge cisheteronormativity within the language classroom and create new possibilities. We…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Social Bias, Second Language Learning, Minority Group Students
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Alexandra Kohn; Dawn McKinnon – College & Research Libraries, 2024
Many libraries and archives have recently released statements about harmful material in their collections and the descriptions of these collections. However, these types of statements are not required for any professional accreditation or membership, nor are there specific guidelines to follow. This study collected and analyzed statements from…
Descriptors: Research Libraries, Library Materials, Guidelines, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Paul J. Yoder – AERA Open, 2024
Trauma studies scholars emphasize naming or acknowledging trauma to promote healing. In response to the recent political and curricular whiplash in the Commonwealth of Virginia, this paper investigates the prevalence and nature of traumagenic events in Virginia's social studies standards. Data analysis suggests that conceptual insights from trauma…
Descriptors: Trauma, Social Studies, Classification, Trauma Informed Approach
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Mariëtte de Haan – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2025
This paper analyses how 'polarisations' in which social tensions between the religious, ethnic and socio-economic groups are believed to increase are experienced and understood by secondary school teachers in the Netherlands. Based on the idea that polarisation is present in everyday interactions, this study contributes to an everyday perspective…
Descriptors: Secondary School Teachers, Teaching Experience, Conflict, Foreign Countries
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Wright-Maley, Cory; Hall, Delandrea; Finley, Shakealia Y. – Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 2023
Trickle-down economics is a fallacious metaphor that hurts working people and the civic commons. In this paper, we discuss the role and impact metaphors have in economics education. We explore the stickiness of "truthy" but ultimately false metaphors and offer economics educators alternative metaphors to displace this problematic…
Descriptors: Ethics, Figurative Language, Economics Education, Language Usage
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Öhrn, Elisabet; Beach, Dennis; Johansson, Monica; Rönnlund, Maria; Rosvall, Per-Åke – Australian and International Journal of Rural Education, 2023
In the autumn of 2015 a large number of mainly Syrian refugees arrived in Sweden. They were unevenly distributed geographically by the authorities and smaller municipalities received proportionally larger numbers than others. The schools became central in the local reception processes. They faced difficulties but also possibilities, both…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Refugees, Rural Schools, Student Needs
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Ebtissam Oraby; Mahmoud Azaz – Applied Linguistics, 2023
Using the tenets of translanguaging and with a focus on Arabic as a diglossic language, we examine the fluid and dynamic practices that transcend the boundaries between/among Standard Arabic, Arabic dialects, and English in content-based instruction in an advanced Arabic literature course. Using conversation analysis, we show how translingual…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Arabic, Dialects, English
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Dilys Schoorman; Rosanna Gatens – Educational Policy, 2025
"Divisive Concepts" laws have sprung up around the nation as a backlash to the widespread commitments to anti-racist education that emerged in summer 2020. This critical policy analysis examines the concepts central to Florida's "Individual Freedom Act" [HB7] of 2022, to determine its intent and impact in ameliorating or…
Descriptors: State Legislation, Equal Education, Language Usage, Elementary Secondary Education
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Nicholas Fimognari; Leaf R. Kardol; Terese O’Shannassy; Katherine A. Sanders; Jeremy T. Smith; Caitlin S. Wyrwoll – Advances in Physiology Education, 2024
Western societal norms have long been constrained by binary and exclusionary perspectives on matters such as infertility, contraception, sexual health, sexuality, and gender. These viewpoints have shaped research and knowledge frameworks for decades and led to an inaccurate and incomplete reproductive biology curriculum. To combat these…
Descriptors: Birth, Sex Education, Sexuality, College Faculty
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Kenneth Driggers; Abbey Hortenstine – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2023
Recent legislation restricting the topics teachers may discuss with students raises the issue of what role the teacher should play in society. We argue that this legislative scrutiny of teachers is symptomatic of an aversion to defining what a teacher is. We argue that, though a reluctance to provide an explicit definition of "teacher"…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Educational Legislation, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Censorship
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Shade Avery Kirjava; Darshana Rawal; Alec Xia; Minhazul Moshin – Discover Education, 2023
Though many individuals in the United States of America and worldwide identify as LGBTQ+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, asexual, and other identities), educational programs for allied health professions often do not adequately cover LGBTQ+ issues. The literature clearly identifies a dearth of LGBTQ+ information in…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Course Content, Development, Social Change
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Clarke, Rachel Ivy – Journal of Education for Library and Information Science, 2020
Future MLIS graduates need to be collaborative, creative, socially innovative, flexible, and adaptable problem solvers--characteristics demonstrated by people with backgrounds in design. Yet design, especially as an epistemological framework, seems underrepresented in master's level library education. This work explores the current landscape of…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Design, Library Education, Course Content
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Stevenson, Andre P.; Alexander, Kendra P.; Thomas, Kenisha; Richardson, Sonyia; Turnage, Barbara; Clarke, Anna; Wood, Zionna – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2022
Linguistic norms concerning issues of social injustice, racism specifically, vary by discipline. In this study, the authors used content analysis to examine discourse in the social work profession related to racism and anti-racist action. Our investigation found that the usage of forthright terms such as racism, white supremacy, and oppression in…
Descriptors: Social Work, Professional Education, Racism, Educational Policy
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