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McGee, Ebony O.; Thakore, Bhoomi K.; LaBlance, Sandra S. – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2017
This qualitative study used narrative methodology to investigate what becoming a scientist or engineer entails for Asian and Asian American college students stereotyped as "model minorities." We present the narratives of 23 high-achieving science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) college students who self-identified as…
Descriptors: Asian American Students, College Students, Ethnic Stereotypes, High Achievement
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McGee, Ebony O. – American Educational Research Journal, 2016
At some point most Black and Latino/a college students--even long-term high achievers--question their own abilities because of multiple forms of racial bias. The 38 high-achieving Black and Latino/a STEM study participants, who attended institutions with racially hostile academic spaces, deployed an arsenal of strategies (e.g., stereotype…
Descriptors: African American Students, Hispanic American Students, College Students, STEM Education
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McGee, Ebony O.; Bentley, Lydia – Cognition and Instruction, 2017
We examine the experiences of 3 high-achieving Black undergraduate and graduate women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). Our findings reveal that structural racism, sexism, and race-gender bias were salient in the women's STEM settings. These experiences were sources of strain, which the women dealt with in ways that…
Descriptors: STEM Education, African American Students, College Students, Females
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McGee, Ebony O.; Pearman, F. Alvin, II – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2015
The gendered and racialized narrative of Black male adolescents in urban spaces is one often fraught with deficit-based assumptions and presuppositions about their abilities, competencies, and proclivities with regard to schooling in general and mathematics in particular. Yet despite these conventional beliefs, compounded by the dearth of Black…
Descriptors: Risk, Males, High School Students, Semi Structured Interviews
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McGee, Ebony O. – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2015
I introduce the construct of fragile and robust identities for the purpose of exploring the experiences that influenced the mathematical and racial identities of high-achieving Black college students in mathematics and engineering. These students maintained high levels of academic achievement in these fields while enduring marginalization,…
Descriptors: High Achievement, African American Students, College Students, Racial Factors
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McGee, Ebony O. – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2013
This study investigated the risk and protective factors of 11 high-achieving African American males attending 4 urban charter high schools in a Midwestern city to determine what factors account for their resilience and success in mathematics courses, and in high school more generally. This research was guided by a Phenomenological Variant of…
Descriptors: High Achievement, At Risk Students, Resilience (Psychology), Males
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McGee, Ebony O. – Journal of Urban Mathematics Education, 2013
In this article, the author discusses the complex challenges of high-achieving Black students who are successful in becoming immersed in predominately White STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) spaces and how such immersion can exacerbate their experiences of racial stereotyping and other forms of racial bias. The author…
Descriptors: Learning Experience, STEM Education, High Achievement, Out of School Youth
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McGee, Ebony O.; Pearman, F. Alvin, II – Urban Education, 2014
Within urban elementary schools are Black students who continue to challenge the normative deficit characterization of the educational opportunities of students like them. This study attempts to provide a more holistic picture of the scholarly trajectories of 13 African American males who are particularly talented in mathematics and who attended…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, At Risk Students, Resilience (Psychology), Mathematics Achievement
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Henfield, Malik S.; McGee, Ebony O. – Interdisciplinary Journal of Teaching and Learning, 2012
Teachers and school counselors must be trained to address many issues confronting students, including Black males. Increasingly, interdisciplinary partnerships are becoming the educational norm as a method to address the many problems that directly and indirectly impact students inside and outside school environments. However, too little has been…
Descriptors: Counselor Teacher Cooperation, Phenomenology, Systems Approach, Social Cognition
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McGee, Ebony O.; Martin, Danny B. – American Educational Research Journal, 2011
Stereotype management is introduced to explain high achievement and resilience among 23 Black mathematics and engineering college students. Characterized as a tactical response to ubiquitous forms of racism and racialized experiences across school and non-school contexts, stereotype management emerged along overlapping paths of racial, gender, and…
Descriptors: Stereotypes, High Achievement, Racial Identification, Engineering
McGee, Ebony O. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This study analyzes the experiences of 23 African Americans, who are all academically high achieving college mathematics and engineering junior, senior and graduate students. Counter-narrative methodology and in-depth case studies accounted for the students' racial and mathematical identities as they were revealed through their experiences in the…
Descriptors: African American Students, Graduate Students, Group Membership, College Mathematics