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Patel, Dhwani – Teaching History, 2021
Much has been written in recent years about how historical scholarship can be used to shape practice in the classroom. As an historian of the medieval period now working as an history teacher, Dhwani Patel offers a fresh perspective on these debates. During her PGCE year, Patel found herself reflecting on how the lenses and methodologies that…
Descriptors: Grade 7, Interdisciplinary Approach, History Instruction, Secondary School Students
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Glick, Stephanie – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2023
This paper conceptualises one possible antidote to the conditions that produce public mass gun violence (PMGV) in the United States. I begin by illuminating how PMGV is a backlash to the nation's 'founding' on the violent divisions of colonisation and coloniality. I then inquire: If PMGV is a reflection of a deep societal wound, what methodologies…
Descriptors: Violence, Weapons, Political Influences, United States History
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Chen Chen – College Composition and Communication, 2025
This Research Brief provides an overview of the current scholarship on transnational feminist rhetorics (TFR), drawing from interdisciplinary traditions. TFR inquiries should always begin with "a cogent analysis of power" (Dingo et al.), attending to how transnational power dynamics act on gendered bodies and how those bodies engage with…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Writing (Composition), Feminism, Rhetoric
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Kathleen Callahan; Sean Connable – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2025
Popular culture exists as an expression of cultural history. It speaks to who we are, what we aspire toward, and where our generation stands in relation to the major issues of the day. This article is a conversation about the myriad perspectives offered in this issue of "New Directions for Student Leadership," exploring the contributions…
Descriptors: Leadership Training, Popular Culture, Story Telling, Current Events
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Zaccor, Karla M.; Thurman, Jake C. – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2021
We are living through a historical moment that is marked by a protracted struggle for systemic changes in the United States as demanded by the broader Movement for Black Lives, as well as a visible increase in White supremacist violence. Although studying race and racism should have always been part of the kindergarten through twelfth-grade…
Descriptors: Whites, English Instruction, Racial Discrimination, Racial Bias
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Zeren Akbulut, Merve Görkem – International Journal of Curriculum and Instruction, 2022
Within the scope of the study area to strengthen the creative process of the transmission of intangible cultural heritage through teaching practices which UNESCO emphasizes, in this research, it is aimed to develop content for learning processes enriched with context-based questions that can be used in high school geography and history lessons…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Heritage Education, Learning Processes, High School Students
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Mfum-Mensah, Obed – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2023
There exists a power asymmetry between instructors and students in the physical classroom and other learning spaces which symbolizes the distribution of power in social spaces. Because of the structured power asymmetry in most learning spaces, promoting effective classroom teaching sometimes requires instructors to replace existing hierarchical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Geographic Regions, Power Structure, Teacher Student Relationship
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Chen, Grace A.; Buell, Jason Y. – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2018
This paper examines historical and contemporary racializations of Asian(Americans) within the STEM system. The prevailing perception of Asian(Americans) as model minorities masks how their multiple and contradictory positionings in the STEM system perpetuate the neoliberal racial project and reproduce systems of racism and oppression. Through a…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, STEM Education, Asian American Students, Neoliberalism
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Gustave Weltsek; Noel Patrick Koontz – English Journal, 2018
Throughout this article, we explore how multiple arts-based learning strategies (ABLS) helped subvert traditional literacy methods. We ask two large questions: (1) How, as critically conscious educators, might we break down inherent institutionalized oppressive structures and have an education of liberation and freedom? (2) What can we say about…
Descriptors: Art Education, Social Justice, Personal Autonomy, Power Structure
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Murris, Karin; Francis, Sieraaj; Babamia, Sumaya; Nxumalo, Fikile; Bozalek, Vivienne; Giorza, Theresa – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2020
The authors bring together decolonial, place attuned, and critical posthumanist orientations to analyze an event during a residential workshop organized as part of a state-funded research project on decolonizing early childhood discourses in South Africa. An invitation during the workshop to grapple with what might be unsettling by attending to…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, Early Childhood Education, Teacher Workshops, Preschool Teachers
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Gonzales, Leslie D. – Journal of Higher Education, 2018
Using various methods and analytical angles, researchers consistently show that members of non-dominant groups, including women, experience academia as a hostile and marginalizing space. Such work is important, and yet, it is equally important that researchers approach the study of women's academic careers by elevating their intellectual labor. In…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, College Faculty, Gender Differences, Professional Recognition
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Jones, Janice K.; Batorowicz, Beata; Ladislas Derr, Robert; Peters, Sarah – International Journal of Pedagogies and Learning, 2015
In an era of globalisation, positivist research methodologies and voices are privileged and funded over those of qualitative researchers. This has led to narrowing beliefs about what constitutes knowledge, and about the ways in which knowledge is constructed and evaluated, impacting upon the conduct, funding and reporting of arts research, and…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Teaching Methods, Art Education, Foreign Countries
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King, LaGarrett J. – Multicultural Education, 2014
The African proverb, "Until the lions have their historians, tales of the hunt shall always glorify the hunter," is used to metaphorically describe how dominant groups inscribe power through historical narrative. In this article the author discusses how African-American educators between the years of 1890-1940 conceptualized citizenship…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Educational History, Textbooks, African American Teachers
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McGee, Ebony O.; Hostetler, Andrew L. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2014
Researchers and theorists in education have offered persuasive arguments and evidence documenting the need for, and benefits of, education for social justice. Despite these efforts the intersection of social justice with interdisciplinary curricular designs remains underexplored. This article argues that social justice education is enriched…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Social Studies, Social Justice, Educational Benefits
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Devlieger, Patrick; Grosvenor, Ian; Simon, Frank; Van Hove, Geert; Vanobbergen, Bruno – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2008
In recent years there has been a growth in interdisciplinary work which has argued that disability is not an isolated, individual medical pathology but instead a key defining social category like "race", class and gender. Seen in this way disability provides researchers with another analytic tool for exploring the nature of power. Running almost…
Descriptors: Photography, Educational History, Workshops, Disabilities
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