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Vicki Hobson; John Hobson; Neeley Minton – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2024
After a white supremacists' rally which fomented terror and death in Charlottesville, VA, a group of local educators came together to reflect on what happened and determine what they could do to push for racial justice in their community. "Reframing the Narrative" (RtN) was created, a years-long grant-funded project to produce and…
Descriptors: Elementary School Curriculum, Elementary School Teachers, Social Justice, Racism
Houlahan, Bridget; Deveneau, Lilianna – Journal of School Nursing, 2021
Despite tremendous challenges, in the early 20th century school nurses provided the first, and often only, medical care for thousands of schoolchildren and their families. However, multiple barriers impeded the developing role. Influences of historical events, financial support, lack of knowledge regarding benefits of the school nurse role,…
Descriptors: School Nurses, Rural Schools, Educational History, Staff Role
Dennis L. Rudnick, Editor – Myers Education Press, 2024
"Resisting Divide-and-Conquer Strategies in Education: Pathways and Possibilities" examines the ways in which divide-and-conquer strategies operate in the American public education system. In U.S. education, these mechanisms are endemic and enduring, if not always evident. Coordinated, strategic, well-funded, politically-viable campaigns…
Descriptors: Public Education, Ideology, Social Influences, Political Issues
Singleton, Korey J. – ProQuest LLC, 2017
The literature shows that both faculty and students hold favorable opinions about UDL principles and practices and students' benefit from such practices when implemented in the higher education classroom. Despite this, faculty members remain resistant to implementing UDL principles and practices. Few studies have examined the barriers impacting…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Online Courses, Curriculum Development, Delphi Technique
Tillerson-Brown, Amy – Journal of School Choice, 2016
In light of contemporary school choice proposals and the 60th anniversary of the Southern Manifesto, the Prince Edward County, Virginia public schools crisis provides interesting historical discussion. Prince Edward County (PEC), a rural community in central Virginia, was one of five school districts represented in the 1954 "Brown v. Board of…
Descriptors: Equal Education, School Choice, Educational Vouchers, Public Schools
Grouling, Jennifer – Composition Forum, 2015
Drawing on the stories and words of GTAs themselves, this article works to complicate our narratives of GTA resistance within practicum courses by situating this resistance in the larger process of identity formation and graduate school. I explore the way that GTAs' dual roles as students and as teachers intersect with teacher preparation,…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Teaching Assistants, Professional Identity, Student Role
Hickel, Jason – Learning and Teaching: The International Journal of Higher Education in the Social Sciences, 2013
Participation in development projects in the Global South has become one of the most sought-after activities among American and British high school graduates and college students. In the United States this often takes the form of Alternative Spring Break trips, while in Britain students typically pursue development work during their "gap…
Descriptors: Poverty, Student Development, Undergraduate Students, Service Learning
Fry, Sara W.; O'Brien, Jason – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2015
Teacher educators have an obligation to prepare preservice teachers with the skills and dispositions necessary to promote a socially just world. Yet the results of this study uncovered that the majority of elementary preservice teachers in a national sample (N = 846) have a simplistic perception of good citizenship consistent with what Westheimer…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Preservice Teachers, Citizenship Education, Social Justice
Schmidt, Ethan A. – American Indian Quarterly, 2012
In August 1676 Nathaniel Bacon brought his campaign to "ruin and extirpate all Indians in general" to the Green Dragon Swamp on the upper Pamunkey River. While there, he attacked and massacred nearly fifty Pamunkey Indians, who had been at peace with the government of Virginia for thirty years. Having once formed the backbone of the…
Descriptors: American Indian History, United States History, Tribes, Leadership
Scott, Brigitte C. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2012
Symbolic violence may not be a desirable theory to apply to public schooling--its structuralist limitations render it deterministic, lacking in human agency, and unpalatable to researchers and educators who see schools as viable and productive sites of social transformation. Perhaps for these reasons, it seems little has been written about…
Descriptors: Violence, Caring, Ethnography, Social Change
Holt, Ann – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2012
Viktor Lowenfeld (1903-1960) has been abundantly documented as having influenced art teaching in the United States. Scarce attention, however, has been given to the significant and remarkable advancements he made to resist structures of institutionalized racism and promote inter-racial cooperation. Lowenfeld was a mentor to several notable African…
Descriptors: Art Teachers, Empowerment, Resistance (Psychology), Activism
Bonastia, Christopher – University of Chicago Press, 2012
In 1959, Virginia's Prince Edward County closed its public schools rather than obey a court order to desegregate. For five years, black children were left to fend for themselves while the courts decided if the county could continue to deny its citizens public education. Investigating this remarkable and nearly forgotten story of local, state, and…
Descriptors: Public Education, Access to Education, Counties, School Desegregation
Riley, Karen L. – American Educational History Journal, 2010
In the current vernacular, co-education means the education of the sexes together within an institutional setting. Once a phenomenon, today, women enjoy nearly equal status on campuses that were at one time bastions of "maleness." Moreover, the counter-culture revolution of the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s, ushered in a new…
Descriptors: Coeducation, African American Students, White Students, Womens Education
Carvalho, Edward J. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2010
In 2007, against a tragically ironic backdrop of National Poetry Month, April indeed was "the cruellest month" (Eliot 1922, I.1). The media spotlight during that time repositioned from Iraq and Afghanistan to Blacksburg, Virginia, where a stateside guerilla incursion at Virginia Tech would mark the single worst episode of school shooting…
Descriptors: United States History, Social Problems, Violence, Terrorism
Cowles, Spencer L. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2005
Minority responses to mainstream schooling have been characterized as ranging from assimilation to resistance. Based on a three-year ethnographic study, this article suggests that such a continuum is inadequate for interpreting the longevity and vibrancy of an Old Order Mennonite community. This durability can be attributed to a "third…
Descriptors: Religious Cultural Groups, Minority Groups, Acculturation, Resistance (Psychology)