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Showing all 12 results Save | Export
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Maximus Monaheng Sefotho; Moeketsi Letseka – School Psychology International, 2024
The concept of "Botho/Ubuntu" emerges as a balancing paradigm poised to drive cognitive justice in psychological discourses. A paradigm is a universally recognized scientific model that represents a worldview of the nature of the world. There are enduring concerns about the privileging of Western European paradigms, ontologies,…
Descriptors: African Culture, Psychology, Justice, Humanization
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Douthirt-Cohen, Beth; Tokunaga, Tomoko; McGuire, T. Donté; Zewdie, Hana – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2023
Over the past 25 years, educators and activists have used ally development models to emphasize how someone with privilege can enact solidarity across identity differences. Conceptualizing how people develop into "allies," is even more pressing in the aftermath of the largest racial justice protests in recorded US history with concerns…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Activism, Intergroup Relations, Humanization
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Patrick Roz Camangian; David Omotoso Stovall – Urban Education, 2024
Bang on the System pairs critical race theory (CRT) with the litany of radical democratic analysis guiding the social practices of various revolutionary movements, proposing a new pedagogical framework that deploys a mutually informed critical race praxis as the basis to engage historically dispossessed youth in their own learning. This lens is…
Descriptors: Praxis, Culturally Relevant Education, Racial Factors, Disadvantaged
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Walker, Melanie – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2023
Learning outcomes are predominantly framed in narrow and measurable terms, with students as decontextualised learners. As an alternative, the paper outlines a capabilitarian approach, building a four-dimensional matrix for reconceptualising learning outcomes. It is made up of a varied, multi-dimensional set of opportunities, processes and outcomes…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Foreign Countries, Educational Trends, Decolonization
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Mary Rice; Shernette Dunn – Distance Learning, 2024
Humanizing research online claims to engage practices that care for human learners. Even so, many of the recommended practices are unreflective about the universalizing ethic from which they draw. We argue that humanizing online learning becomes tangled in broader university aims that expect care to happen aside from underlying histories of…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Educational Opportunities, Humanization, Decolonization
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Gabi, Josephine; Olsson Rost, Anna; Warner, Diane; Asif, Uzma – Curriculum Journal, 2023
The impact of colonisation, cognitive imperialism, and Eurocentric modes of knowing, being and doing has had an effect on Higher Education, including teacher education. Colonial epistemologies, epistemicide, academic dependency, disempowerment and intellectual inferiority are challenged by liberatory pedagogies that present opportunities to…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Social Justice, Praxis, Teacher Educators
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Jody Stark – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2023
In this article, I explore several complicating factors that impact (White) music teachers as they work towards decolonizing their teaching practices. Created by the discursive structures of settler colonialism, these factors include the discourse of an additive multiculturalism, both in society and in the field of music education, the tendency to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Music Teachers, Elementary Secondary Education, White Teachers
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Christopher P. Davey – Journal of Peace Education, 2025
This article addresses the intersection of genocide studies, climate change, and peace education. It does so by examining the state of these connections, and proposes a fresh concept for considering the entanglements of contemporary violence in the Anthropocene. A notion of postgenocide sees the elements of geopolitical order, warlordism, climate…
Descriptors: Death, Decolonization, Crime, War
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Xinyue Ren – Distance Education, 2024
With the growth of cultural diversity in online higher education, this qualitative research aimed to investigate instructors' perceptions, practices, and challenges of increasing cultural presence in online course design and delivery. Seventeen instructors with different disciplinary backgrounds, online teaching experiences, titles, and ranks…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Electronic Learning
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Khoo, Yishin; Lin, Jing – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2023
This paper responds to the special issue's call for educators to examine the epistemological and ontological changes that happen to themselves after long-term working abroad and how this experience helps challenge theoretical and pedagogical norms in education. Employing collaborative autoethnography as our research method, we use our life stories…
Descriptors: Non Western Civilization, Autobiographies, Ethnography, Research Methodology
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Antonia Darder – Qualitative Research Journal, 2018
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the notion of decolonizing interpretive research in ways that respect and integrate the qualitative sensibilities of subaltern voices in the knowledge production of anti-colonial possibilities. Design/methodology/approach: The paper draws from the decolonizing and post-colonial theoretical…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Disadvantaged, Decolonization, Cultural Awareness
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Gatwiri, Kathomi – Whiteness and Education, 2018
This paper uses an autoethnographic Freirean approach to theorise how white power moves in universities, and to speak to the pedagogical challenges (and successes) that I have encountered as a scholar of colour teaching in predominantly white universities in Australia and my various attempts to decolonise my teaching. While in social work…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Decolonization, Whites, Universities