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Kirsten Slungaard Mumma – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
The recent spike in book challenges has put school libraries at the center of heated political debates. I investigate the relationship between local politics and school library collections using data on books with controversial content in 6,631 public school libraries. Libraries in conservative areas have fewer titles with LGBTQ+, race/racism, or…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Books, School Libraries, Library Materials
Charlotte Morris – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
This paper considers critical reflection as a pedagogical strategy in UK higher education at a moment of an amplification of populist, reactionary discourses. It draws on written reflections of foundation-level students in a case study cohort and offers insights into their lived learning experiences and perceptions of the value of reflection. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Context, Racism, Social Justice
Nora Gross; Ellen Bryer; Charlotte E. Jacobs; Jarvis Goosby – Democracy & Education, 2024
Affective political polarization, or a sense of political identity-based animosity or distrust, became especially heightened during the Trump presidency. However, we know little about how youth experience such polarization in school and its effect on their political socialization. With unusual access to high-status independent schools, this paper…
Descriptors: High Schools, Politics of Education, Political Attitudes, Political Issues
Will Teague – History of Education Quarterly, 2024
In the late 1970s Iranian student activists in the United States worked to educate the American public on the history of the US-Iranian relationship and the long-term consequences in Iran of the 1953 CIA-sponsored coup that placed Mohammad Reza Pahlavi on the Iranian throne. The students directly challenged local and state governments to respect…
Descriptors: Activism, Foreign Students, United States History, Educational History
Hannah Rach – Geography Teacher, 2024
Graphic novels have emerged as an effective pedagogical tool for teaching complex processes like global migration. Through their use of visual language, graphic novels can offer insights into the lived experiences of migrants and refugees, their challenges and triumphs, and the broader social and political contexts that shape migration. Graphic…
Descriptors: Refugees, Migration, Cartoons, Novels
Melissa Redmond; Liz Woodside; Beth Martin – Journal of Experiential Education, 2024
Background: Like other professional training programs, social work pedagogy has long recognized the value of experiential learning for professional development. Despite social work's rich experiential learning literature involving field education, direct practice courses, and program evaluation, there is a dearth of literature examining how to…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Social Work, Professional Education, Class Size
Luengo, Óscar; García-Marín, Javier; de-Blasio, Emiliana – Comunicar: Media Education Research Journal, 2021
Social media has significantly transformed how political discussions and deliberations occur, mainly by providing a digital realm for the public sphere. This study aims to analyse the extent of polarised opinions across Spain, Italy and the United Kingdom regarding COVID-19 during 2020 within social media. To do this, we examined YouTube comments…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Social Media, Foreign Countries
Kammerer, Edward F., Jr.; Higashi, Brenden – Journal of Political Science Education, 2021
Anecdotal evidence suggests pedagogy research on simulations in political science is dominated by two subfields: International Relations and Comparative Politics. This belief may stem from the widespread use of things like Model United Nations and Model Arab League or the popular game Statecraft. While some other subfields, notably public law,…
Descriptors: Simulation, Political Science, Active Learning, Role Playing
Lyon, Melissa Arnold; Kraft, Matthew A. – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2021
Teacher strikes have gained national attention with the "#RedforEd" movement. Such strikes are polarizing events that could serve to elevate education as a political priority or cast education politics in a negative light. We investigate this empirically by collecting original panel data on U.S. teacher strikes, which we link to…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Teacher Strikes, Legislators, Political Campaigns
Olushola Aromona – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Following experts' calls that information literacy interventions can inoculate against misleading political information, this study examines how students who have undergone an information literacy training evaluate political information one year after the classroom training. The intervention consisted of a one-semester information literacy course…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Information Skills, Information Dissemination, Intervention
Altae, Mayamin – Management in Education, 2022
This article addresses the professional challenges faced by teacher leaders in Iraq. The country is beginning to emerge from a period of political unrest and violent threats to personal safety. This has seriously affected the educational provision; nowhere more so than in Mosul, Iraq's third-largest city. The article examines three issues: how…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Leadership, Professional Identity, Empowerment
Malin, Joel R.; Tan, Jing – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2022
Especially since 2010, conservative interests' dominance at advancing their preferred policies across U.S. states has been clear, with large and escalating impacts in education. Although adversaries on the political left remain in catch-up mode, there have been auspicious developments. This study focuses on one of these, seeking to understand a…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, State Policy, Politics of Education, Power Structure
Kathleen Gallagher; Christine Balt; Nancy Cardwell; Lindsay Valve – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
This paper considers the social role of collaborative ethnographic research amid our current intersecting social, political and ecological crises. It investigates how the multi-sited, arts-based, ethnographic study, "Global Youth (Digital) Citizen-Artists and their Publics: Performing for Socio-Ecological Justice (2019-2024)," adopts…
Descriptors: High School Students, Art Education, Social Indicators, Social Problems
Anton Abdul Fatah; Line Kuppens; Arnim Langer – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2024
In 2005, Kitson and McCully introduced the 'risk-taking' continuum, representing the multiple ways in which teachers in post-conflict societies deal with the history of conflict in the classroom. 'Avoiders', at one extreme, refrain from teaching the violent past, while at the other extreme 'risk-takers' analyse multiple perspectives on what…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, History Instruction, Local History
Lynne Chandler Garcia; Stacy Ulbig – Journal of Political Science Education, 2024
In a highly polarized political environment, political discourse on divisive topics is all the more important. Heeding the many calls for higher education to teach political discourse skills, this study investigates the impact of political discourse lessons in a college-level, political science classroom. Further, it explores the effectiveness of…
Descriptors: College Students, Political Issues, Teacher Role, Discourse Modes