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Mildred Boveda – Theory Into Practice, 2024
Special educators are increasingly drawing from intersectionality and Black feminist theory to make sense of the disproportionate deleterious outcomes experienced by racialized students labeled with disabilities. While intersectionality gains a stronger hold in special education discourse, agencies like the Florida Department of Education are…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, African Americans, Feminism, Advocacy
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Lydia Ocasio-Stoutenburg; Mildred Boveda – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
Traditionally, the academic field of special education has resisted critical perspectives. Despite their advanced skills, epistemological approaches, and ways of knowing, special education scholars enacting qualitative inquiry have often described inadequate support from their academic community. In a parallel manner, Black mothering in historical…
Descriptors: African Americans, Mothers, Disabilities, Attitudes toward Disabilities
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Martha Lorena Hernández Flores; Mildred Boveda – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2024
This case demonstrates how school administrators' development of intersectional competence can disrupt racial inequity in special education. Intersectional competence refers to educators' preparedness to recognize how schooling is implicated in multiple, intersecting systems of oppression, collaborate with relevant stakeholders who themselves…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Special Education Teachers, Special Education, Students with Disabilities