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Alonso, Roxana Aguilar – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2020
Using auto-ethnography, I write my story as Mexican international student in the role of pre-service teacher in Australia. I focus on exploring my socio-political status and its relationship to assuming a position to respond to education policies about working with students from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander backgrounds, and teaching…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Preservice Teachers, Pacific Islanders, Ethnic Groups
Gauvain, Mary – Developmental Science, 2013
For over 50 years, developmental psychologists have conducted research around the world to understand the relation between culture and cognition. In fact, psychologists have been interested in this topic for over a century. In the late 1800s, Wundt introduced "Elements of Folk Psychology," the study of how culture becomes part of higher…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Inquiry, Cultural Context, Intellectual History
Peers, Danielle; Brittain, Melisa; McRuer, Robert – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2012
A book, article, or theory might be judged not only by the insightfulness of the claims it makes, but also by the connections, possibilities, and politics that it fosters. By these criteria, Robert McRuer's publications, of which the most widely known is "Crip Theory: Cultural Signs of Queerness and Disability" (2006), are crucial. He weaves…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Audiences, Disabilities, Social Attitudes
de Saxe, Jennifer – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2012
This theoretical paper analyzes the relationship between critical feminist theory and emancipatory education as it relates to transformative educational practices. The first section will discuss how the author understands critical feminist theory by looking to Chela Sandoval's theoretical framework of oppositional resistance. The author discusses…
Descriptors: Feminism, Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Practices, Higher Education
Gerrard, Jessica – Educational Theory, 2013
Recently, a range of educational theorists have explored and extended upon popular currents in political theory through articulating "open" and "unknowing" pedagogies. Such contributions represent a radical turn away from the presumed "universals" found in proclamations of justice and emancipation and, ultimately, the centering of class analysis.…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Educational Theories, Social Theories, Social Class
Priestley, Mark – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2011
In the face of what has been characterised by some as a "crisis" in curriculum--an apparent decline of some aspects of curriculum studies combined with the emergence of new types of national curricula which downgrade knowledge--some writers have been arguing for the use of realist theory to address these issues. This article offers a…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Realism, Curriculum Research, Social Theories
Richardson, Troy – Curriculum Inquiry, 2011
This conceptual essay explores how Gerald Vizenor's (Anishinaabe) literary discussions of "shadow survivance" provide opportunities to work against the containment of Indigenous knowledge in mainstream and culture-based curricular practices. More specifically, the essay considers how constructivism is deployed as an opening to the inclusion of…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Indigenous Knowledge, American Indians, Curriculum Development
Gaztambide-Fernandez, Ruben A. – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2011
Descriptions of the urban contemporary format remain strongly grounded on the assumption that it is based on musical styles associated with African Americans, such as R&B, soul, hip hop, rap, and reggae. Even for the most progressive educators, to speak of urban music is to refer to a narrow set of musical genres associated with the umbrella term…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Music Education, Music Teachers, Urban Education
Kozleski, Elizabeth B. – Teacher Education and Special Education, 2011
In this commentary, the author provides a framework for examining the articles in this issue. The author does so by providing a focus for reading and linking our brief history to the present and the future. She provides a set of questions about engaging research that seeks to improve the ways in which we question, construct understanding, and…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Teacher Education, Educational Improvement, Cooperation
Abraham, John – Gender and Education, 2008
This article examines recent claims by Jeffrey Smith that: (1) "hegemonic masculinity" is an expression of working class counter-school culture; (2) some teachers are "cultural accomplices" in constructing "hegemonic masculinities" of anti-school working class boys, thereby contributing to their underachievement; and (3) these "cultural…
Descriptors: Working Class, School Culture, Males, Masculinity
Baszile, Denise Taliaferro – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2009
Although hip hop culture has been one of the most significant urban youth movements over the last three decades, it has only recently gained attention within the educational literature as a force to be reckoned with. And even then, much of the literature seeks to understand how hip hop can be used to engage students in the official school…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Curriculum Research, Urban Youth, Popular Culture
Cherland, Meredith – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2008
How do we become the people we are? Humanist common sense proposes that people are born with a rational "self." But poststructural theory proposes a subjectivity formed in interaction with cultural discourses. Poststructural theory offers teachers fresh ways to teach critical literacy and thinking and provides students with ways to resist ideas…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Discourse Analysis, Fantasy, Novels
Bruce, Bertram C. – International Journal of Progressive Education, 2008
Stories are how we make sense of experiences, thus providing the historical sense of life. To paraphrase Dewey, extracting at each present time the full meaning of each present experience enables us to do the same for our pasts. The continual reconstruction of the past in the light of the present is integral to full engagement with the present…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Personal Narratives, Social Theories, Inquiry
Tatum, Alfred W. – Harvard Educational Review, 2008
In this article, Alfred Tatum argues that the current framing of the adolescent literacy crisis fails to take into account the in-school and out-of-school challenges confronting many African American male adolescents today, particularly those growing up in high-poverty communities. Using the metaphor of literacy instruction as a human body, he…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Literacy, Teaching Methods, Males

McDermott, Ray; Varenne, Herve – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 1995
An ethnographic analysis of the cultural constructs of various disabilities, such as deafness, learning disabilities, and illiteracy, reveals identifications attuned to the workings of institutions serving political and economic ends through formal educational means rather than identifications of truly disabled persons. (MMU)
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Cultural Influences, Disabilities, Ethnography