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Christian Genest; James A. Hanley; Sahir R. Bhatnagar – Journal of Statistics and Data Science Education, 2024
This article provides an introduction to randomized response polling, a technique which was designed to allow for questioning on sensitive issues while protecting the respondent's privacy and avoiding social desirability bias. It is described in terms that are suitable for presentation and use in any classroom environment. Instructions for plain…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Randomized Controlled Trials, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Privacy
Leandra Hinojosa Hernández; Stevie M. Munz – Communication Education, 2024
In this article, we provide an overview of the overturning of Roe v. Wade and consider its implications for communication classrooms in higher education. We assert that we as communication educators have a moral imperative to consider the role of intersectionality and reproductive justice in our teaching philosophies and implementation, and to do…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Pregnancy, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Intersectionality
Adriana L. Medina; Rachelle Kuehl; Edwina Pendarvis – Phi Delta Kappan, 2024
Teaching literacy skills through high-quality trade books that provide diverse cultural perspectives is increasingly difficult due to challenges to teachers' book selections. To meet their professional responsibilities, teachers must select literature they judge effective for developing students' awareness and understanding of others'…
Descriptors: Books, Censorship, Literacy, Culturally Relevant Education
Stéphane Lévesque – Hungarian Educational Research Journal, 2023
Around the western world various activist groups confront controversial monuments and other mnemonic infrastructures of historical culture representing contested histories and equally contested visions of the future. This article presents an original model for analyzing controversial issues of commemoration in the context of history education.…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Historic Sites, Sculpture
Patricia Ramírez-Biondolillo – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2025
Katie Milton Brkich et al., "The Rejection of the NGSS in Georgia: Social Covenants as Contextually Mitigating Factors," offers a compelling critical analysis that highlights how social-political influences, introduced as covenants, shape curricular decisions that may limit science literacy within the curricular landscape of science…
Descriptors: Science Education, Political Issues, Social Influences, Political Influences
Krutka, Daniel G.; Hlavacik, Mark – Social Education, 2022
Building on the Inquiry Design Model (IDM) developed by Kathy Swan, John Lee, and S.G. Grant as an instructional articulation of the C3 Framework, Ryan Crowley and LaGarrett King suggest that teachers engage in a critical inquiry when addressing injustices. They recommend teachers accomplish this by designing inquiries that question systems of…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Racism, History Instruction, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
Maree Davies; Gareth Haddon – set: Research Information for Teachers, 2025
Teaching controversial issues is particularly challenging in today's world of misinformation, disinformation, and fake news. This article explores how critical thinking can be embedded in such discussions using the street smarts critical thinking model. The study focuses on the contentious use of the poison 1080 as a case study, systematically…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Conservation (Environment), Poisoning, Critical Thinking
Scott Gelber – Review of Higher Education, 2024
Scholars have analyzed debates about controversial faculty speech inside and outside of the classroom, but none have paid close attention to the facet of academic freedom related to professors' decisions about daily teaching methods. This omission, along with obstacles to enacting pedagogical norms, has caused the scholarly community to overlook…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Academic Freedom, Teaching Methods, Professional Autonomy
Henry Miller; Christian Hines; René M. Rodríguez-Astacio – English Journal, 2024
In this article, the authors work to illustrate how "Miles Morales Suspended" by Jason Reynolds, an author whose work has been targeted by book ban efforts (Knight, 2022), can be positioned in English classrooms to teach about contemporary attacks on Black literature through book bans. The teaching outlined in this article is part of a…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, African American Literature, Language Arts, Reading Material Selection
PresleyTaylor Shilling; Jeffrey M. Byford – Social Studies, 2024
Until the beginning of the 21st century, the Tulsa Race Massacre was omitted mainly from the social studies curriculum and state-mandated standards in the United States. However, the featured lesson provides a valuable springboard to explore the historical perspectives and injustices against the Black community in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on May 31, 1921.…
Descriptors: United States History, African American History, Racism, Violence
Fredrik Alvén – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
Most of the history education research that addresses controversial issues suggests that disputes arising in the history classroom are rooted in students' diverse identities that relate differently to history. Therefore, a history education that wants to ease tensions must try both to make these different identities and their relations to history…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), History Instruction, Civics, Empathy
Bellows, Elizabeth; Buchanan, Lisa Brown – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2022
The authors provide an overview of teaching war and explore ways to situate these notions in the elementary classroom. As part of this discussion, they offer a guide for selecting appropriate texts for a thematic text set for children involving issues of war and peace.
Descriptors: History Instruction, War, Elementary School Students, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
Talula Pontuti; Serena Madsen; Lundquist; Richard M. Medina – Journal of Geography, 2024
This article describes the process taken by members of a seminar course on radical geography in a primarily quantitative geography department. This course was taught during tumultuous times necessitating the need to explore radical topics and abstract conceptualizations of space and place. We offer our experiences and lessons learned while…
Descriptors: Ideology, Geography Instruction, Geographic Concepts, Teaching Methods
Bruce Maxwell – Educational Theory, 2025
When do teachers need to deal with sociopolitical issues impartially and when are they justified in taking a stand? In the academic literature, attempts to answer this question have centered on the relative merits of four criteria of "controversial issues": the epistemic criterion, the behavioral criterion, the politically authentic…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Ethics, Teacher Responsibility
Érica Fernández; Bryan J. Duarte – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2025
In this case narrative, we introduce readers to Carmén, a newly appointed Queer Latina principal. Faced with bureaucratic responses to proposed anti-critical race theory (CRT) and LGBTQ+ legislation, Carmén is forced to contend with teacher and district responses and concerns. The case narrative is divided into three events, each requiring readers…
Descriptors: Principals, LGBTQ People, Hispanic Americans, Females

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