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Sarah E. Stanlick; George DeMartino; Sharon D. Welch – Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, 2023
The democratization of knowledge is liberating and has presented some new and difficult challenges. When everyone can position themselves as an expert, how do we create new frames of intellectual and pragmatic knowledge with integrity? How do we understand the histories of expert privilege and harm that have led us to this time of uncertainty? And…
Descriptors: Expertise, School Community Relationship, Power Structure, Ethics
Glenn Toh – Policy Futures in Education, 2024
As part of my work as an educator, I see the need to surface for discussion what might indeed be considered as acts of oppression on the part of peer reviewers when certain aspects of knowing and meaning are misrecognized, obscured, or suppressed. Drawing on observations concerning coercive and oppressive relational and educational practices found…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Evaluators, Power Structure, Ideology
Sarah Godsell; Bongani Shabangu; Guy Primrose – Cogent Education, 2024
Assessment remains a power nexus in Higher Education, where remnants of coloniality pool. The power that assessment holds makes it an important site for decolonisation. The purpose of this article is to present an experiment, and open a discussion, on the decolonisation of assessment. We argue that bringing assessment into the decolonisation…
Descriptors: Postcolonialism, Universities, Educational History, Power Structure
Jarvie, Scott – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2019
It is typically understood that friendship is define as "a close and informal relationship of mutual trust and intimacy" (Oxford English Dictionary). On a basic level, friends care about each other. They spend time interacting in ways that are mutually beneficial. Friendships usually take a period of time to develop--people typically do…
Descriptors: Friendship, Teacher Student Relationship, Humanization, Interaction
Yeh, Cathery; Tan, Paulo; Reinholz, Daniel L. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2021
Borders--territorial, economic, political, and ideological--are processes of social division. They monitor and exclude and are regulated, patrolled, and maintained by an array of power regimes, but borderlands are also sites of movement, agency, and resistance. Likewise, mathematics is used as a border that divides and politicizes. In this…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Epistemology, Definitions, Social Justice
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
Carlson, L. – Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 2010
This article poses the question, "Who is the expert?" in relation to people with intellectual disabilities. It begins with an exploration of what it means to assert "moral authority" in relation to people with IDs, and makes the argument that "experts" who draw moral boundaries, define conceptions of the "good" and quality of life for people must…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Quality of Life, Expertise, Epistemology
Reyes, Reynaldo, III – High School Journal, 2016
One of the many consequences of a neoliberal, high-stakes policy in No Child Left Behind has been that teachers and administrators have resorted to the systematic removal of vulnerable student groups, such as Latina/o English language learners. This process has dehumanized these students and commodified aspects of their identity, such as language,…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, High Stakes Tests, Educational Legislation, Federal Legislation
Paris, Django – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2011
In this article, I conceptualize ethnographic, qualitative, and social language research with marginalized and oppressed communities as "humanizing research". Humanizing research is a methodological stance, which requires that our inquiries involve dialogic consciousness-raising and the building of relationships of dignity and care for both…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Humanization, Ethnography, Sociolinguistics