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Stanley, Melissa K.; Schroeder, Stephanie – Social Studies, 2023
The American Civil Rights Movement has often been misrepresented in textbooks, children's literature, and other curricular materials. With knowledge of the ongoing curricular distortion around Black history in P-12 curricula in mind, this article explores how a commonly used social studies curriculum, "Studies Weekly"®, represents the…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Curriculum, Civil Rights, Whites
Rachel McMillian; Reginald BoClair – Critical Education, 2025
Discussions of Black anarchism are rarely, if ever, found in the fields of educational theory and research. Characterizations of Black anarchism often paint it as a philosophy and praxis to be feared--as a movement that promotes violence and chaos. Yet, as the authors of this piece argue, Black anarchism is exactly the opposite: promoting a vision…
Descriptors: African Americans, Social Systems, African American Attitudes, Social Justice
Zhou, Jiangyuan – Journal of Global Education and Research, 2022
Global learning has become a fundamental aspect of international education. Yet, a clear understanding of global learning and how to develop it remain unclear. Using the dynamic systems approach, this paper analyzed the reasons, methods, and knowledge, skills, and attitudes (KSA) of global learning in higher education. Global learning is the…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Higher Education, Undergraduate Students, Knowledge Level
Maitland, Hannah – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2023
School-based sex education has been a controversial issue in the province of Ontario, Canada. When an updated sex education curriculum was introduced by the provincial government in 2015, the media heavily covered negative reactions to the curriculum, and one distinct genre of reporting became modestly popular: the fact-checking article. These…
Descriptors: Sex Education, Audits (Verification), Misconceptions, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
Maryanne Macdonald; Sarah Booth; Libby Jackson-Barrett – Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2024
New data is presented from two studies involving thirteen practising secondary teachers and twelve pre-service early childhood, primary and secondary teachers in Australia. The first study explored how non-Indigenous practising teacher identities, shaped by external and policy discourse, create obstacles to teachers' willingness and confidence in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, Preservice Teachers, Indigenous Knowledge
Burton, Jared Z.; Warne, Russell T. – Teaching of Psychology, 2020
Intelligence is a well-studied construct in psychology that has correlational relationships with many educational, employment, and health outcomes. However, prior research indicates that incorrect beliefs about intelligence are widespread. In an effort to discern the degree to which the psychology curriculum is responsible for these inaccuracies,…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Psychology, Curriculum, Colleges
Colleen E. Whittingham; Emily Brown Hoffman – Peabody Journal of Education, 2024
A critical content analysis is employed to scrutinize the second-grade materials within EL education's English language arts curriculum. Applying critical race theory, this study confronts the pervasive anti-Black narrative embedded in standardized curriculum used in the United States. The study unveils the presence of this narrative in the…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Instructional Materials, Language Arts, Racism
Brant-Birioukov, Kiera – Prospects, 2021
In the midst of the global COVID-19 pandemic, educators are invited to pause and reconsider the legacies this crisis will leave for future generations. What lessons do we take forward in a post-COVID-19 curriculum? This article contemplates the value of Indigenous resilience, innovation, and adaptation in times of…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge
Monreal, Timothy; McCorkle, William – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2021
Teachers' beliefs and awareness regarding immigration policy is an area of research that has been largely unexplored in the broader discussion of socio-political consciousness and critical social studies education. This study is based on a multi-methods methodology, particularly a partially mixed sequential equal status design (Leech and…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Teacher Attitudes, Beliefs, Immigration
Field, James Colin – Canadian Social Studies, 2018
"Trump has discovered something about epistemology in the 21st Century. The truth may be real, but falsehood often works better" (Scherer, M., "Time", April 3, 2017). Ironically perhaps, I took what the Donald has discovered about Western epistemology in our age to be true, so my first cautious answer to the question posed in…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Misconceptions, Deception, Curriculum
Fallace, Thomas; Fantozzi, Victoria – Teachers College Record, 2017
Background/Context: Over the last century, perhaps no school in American history has been studied more than John Dewey's Laboratory School at the University of Chicago (1896-1904). Scholars have published dozens of articles, books, essays, and assessments of a school that existed for only seven and a half years. Purpose/Objective/Research…
Descriptors: Laboratory Schools, Educational History, School Closing, Curriculum
Liu, Xing – Educational Studies in Japan: International Yearbook, 2017
Franklin Bobbitt is the founder of modern curriculum theory. There is a generally supported saying that Bobbitt's theory went through two stages, the first focused on social efficiency with a mechanical and behavioral approach, and the second a more progressive approach, caring for the living experience of pupils. A close reading of his so-called…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Social Influences, Behavior, Caring
Mercer-Mapstone, Lucy; Bajan, Sarah; Banas, Kasia; Morphett, Arthur – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2021
The need to make higher education curricula gender-inclusive is increasingly pressing as student cohorts diversify. We adopted a student-staff partnership approach to design, integrate, and evaluate a module that taught first-year science students the difference between biological sex, gender identity, gender expression, and sexual orientation in…
Descriptors: College Science, Biology, Sex, Sexual Identity
Hughes, Ryan E. – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2022
This study investigates how 19 third-grade students developed their understandings of enslavement during a six-week social studies inquiry. Using Teaching Tolerance's key concepts as my analytic framework, I analyzed the students' pre- and post-concept maps and classwork to understand their learning. The findings show that students conceptualized…
Descriptors: Grade 3, Elementary School Students, Slavery, United States History
Krueger, Justin – History Teacher, 2019
For many non-native people, Native Americans are one large homogenous group. A fairly simple "group" to understand. Indigenous people are commonly presented and understood through long-enduring imagery via movies, advertising, product naming, and mascots. Through these processes, indigenous peoples are labeled, named, and historically…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, American Indians, Critical Theory, Race