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Beneke, Margaret R. – Educational Researcher, 2021
Education researchers have extensively documented young children's capacity to exhibit "bias" in relation to disability or race. By and large, data generation has focused on children's awareness and attitudes about disability or race, rather than how interactions and structures construct and reinforce them. Bridging disability critical…
Descriptors: Young Children, Childrens Attitudes, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Racial Attitudes
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Beneke, Margaret R.; Siuty, Molly Baustien; Handy, Tamara – Teachers College Record, 2022
Context: Geographies of exclusion (e.g., segregated special education classrooms, school district zoning) are constituted through intersecting oppressive ideologies (e.g., ableism, racism, classism) that co-naturalize notions of "normalcy" and deviance and yield harmful consequences for disabled children of Color. Geographies of…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Whites, Preservice Teacher Education, Educational Research
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Beneke, Margaret R.; Collins, Shayla; Powell, Selma – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2021
In this critical, qualitative study, we utilized Disability Critical Race Theory and revolutionary mothering to understand how Mothers of Color who have young children with disabilities made meaning of underlying constitutions of competence within schools, and how they conceptualized possibility for justice in early childhood. Findings reveal how…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Mothers, Critical Theory, Race
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Beneke, Margaret R.; Park, Caryn C.; Taitingfong, Jordan – Young Exceptional Children, 2019
While early childhood (EC) and early childhood special education (ECSE) educators may recognize young children are grappling with ideas about racial identity and fairness, they may feel unsure of how to respond, may be hesitant about what is appropriate to introduce, may question their own competence in facilitating racial dialogue, and/or may…
Descriptors: Race, Inclusion, Racial Bias, Early Childhood Education
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Beneke, Margaret R.; Cheatham, Gregory A. – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2019
Reading literature to engage young children in critical discussions about race -- and how it impacts their daily lives -- is a promising practice. This study examined how two teachers and eight young children talked about skin colour as they read books about racial diversity, and the extent to which participation structures and conversational…
Descriptors: Race, Preschool Education, Preschool Teachers, Preschool Children
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Love, Hailey R.; Beneke, Margaret R. – Topics in Early Childhood Special Education, 2021
Multiple scholars have argued that early childhood inclusive education research and practice has often retained racialized, ableist notions of normal development, which can undermine efforts to advance justice and contribute to biased educational processes and practices. Racism and ableism intersect through the positioning of young children of…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Racial Bias, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Social Bias
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Beneke, Margaret R.; Cheatham, Gregory A. – Journal of Literacy Research, 2020
In educational contexts, including early childhood settings, ableism and racism circulate interdependently to define normalcy and deviance. Book reading offers an important platform for dismantling these interlocking ideologies with young children. In this article, we examine dis/ability and race talk in the context of picture-book reading,…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Disabilities, Race, Picture Books
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Beneke, Margaret R. – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2019
Preparing teacher candidates to enact inclusion can be challenging, particularly as teacher candidates navigate intersecting, oppressive ideologies (e.g., ableism and racism). In this paper, I present an analysis of qualitative data from a larger, multiple case study, highlighting the socio-spatial dimensions of White, non-disabled teacher…
Descriptors: Teacher Education Programs, Preservice Teachers, Inclusion, Race