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Michael Steven Brown Jr. – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Previous research has shown that Black males do not find schools to be safe spaces or places where they feel a sense of belonging. Instead, they do not feel welcomed (Brooms, 2019a). If students must spend 8 to 9 hours in a place daily, we will want that space to be somewhere they want to be. Findings from research conducted by Collins et al.…
Descriptors: Males, Sense of Community, Student Attitudes, Adolescents
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James Joshua Coleman; Mandie Bevels Dunn – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2024
Making sense of normalized feelings in teacher education, scholarship on race and gender has spotlighted the affective and emotional landscapes of teaching and detailed how the profession has been shaped around its primary workers, cisgender straight white women. "Dis"affection, though, or unfeeling in ways that disrupt the sociality of…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Affective Behavior, Behavior Standards, Social Behavior
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Shifrer, Dara; Phillippo, Kate; Tilbrook, Ned; Morton, Karisma – Sociology of Education, 2023
Using data on ninth graders, math teachers, and schools from the nationally representative High School Longitudinal Study of 2009, we investigate the following questions: (1) How do ninth graders' perceptions of their math teachers as equitable relate to their math identity at the intersection of adolescents' race and gender? and (2) Do…
Descriptors: Grade 9, Student Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Equal Education
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Ashley Cureton; Erick Aguinaldo – Youth & Society, 2024
Schools have been considered critical institutions for refugee youth. However, Muslim refugee youth experience challenges navigating schools during an increasingly hostile sociopolitical climate for Muslim people. Drawing on the adolescent development framework, this phenomenological study explores how school-based experiences help to shape Muslim…
Descriptors: High School Students, Muslims, Refugees, Self Concept
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Hina Amirali – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2024
This article examines the representation of Islam in four of the most popular and current Religious Education textbooks in England. The aim is to identify the extent to which the curriculum content is aligned with the aims of Religious Education in England. The textbooks content is reviewed using three frameworks available in literature, two of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Religious Education, Textbook Content, Islam
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Margo Vandenbroeck; Jonas Dockx; Rianne Janssen – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2024
The stereotype content model (SCM) describes that groups of people are mainly appraised according to two dimensions: warmth and competence. The present study's aim was to investigate possible stereotyped perceptions held by Grade 12 students in Flanders (the northern part of Belgium) of students in the three major educational tracks. They were…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 12, Student Attitudes, Track System (Education)
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Margo Vandenbroeck; Jonas Dockx; Ellen Claes; Rianne Janssen – Educational Studies, 2024
Educational tracking can lead to different citizenship outcomes. Most studies on the relationship between citizenship and educational track membership applied a variable-centered approach, comparing averages between tracks but not considering differences between students within a track. Person-centered approaches have shown that different…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 12, Track System (Education), Ability Grouping
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Stephanie Wessels; Theresa Catalano; Jenelle Reeves; Alison E. Leonard; Uma Ganesan; Alessia Barbici-Wagner; Consuelo Gallardo – TESOL Journal, 2024
This arts-practice research study explores what happens when preservice high school teachers (aka teacher-learners) and local refugee communities engage in the co-creation of art together via an arts-and community-based project. Grounded in social justice teacher education, the researchers conducted a 2-week workshop in which participants included…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Immigrants, Refugees
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Martínez-Rodríguez, Marta – International Journal of Music Education, 2023
The history of music is shaped through narratives that sometimes contain a number of issues regarding cultural stereotypes, historiographic approaches, Eurocentrism or colonialism. For this reason, its transmission and the way it is taught must be the object of study and careful consideration. The present research analyses -- on the basis of…
Descriptors: Music, Criticism, Textbooks, Textbook Evaluation
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Anne E. Riggs; Antonya Marie Gonzalez – Developmental Science, 2024
How does the representation of boy and girl exemplars in curricular materials affect students' learning? We tested two competing hypotheses about the impact of gender exemplar on learning: First, in line with Social Learning Theory, children might exhibit a same-gender bias such that they prefer to learn from exemplars that match their gender…
Descriptors: Instructional Materials, Student Characteristics, Sex, Gender Bias
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Christine R. Starr; Campbell Leaper – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2024
Nerd-genius stereotypes about people in the physical sciences, technology, engineering, and mathematics (pSTEM) are barriers to getting many adolescent girls interested in pSTEM. Endorsing these stereotypes may undermine youths' pSTEM identity especially when they are incongruent with their self-concepts--possibly more likely for girls than boys.…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Stereotypes, Academically Gifted, Self Concept
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Ören, Fatma Sasmaz; Karapinar, Aysegül; Sari, Kübranur; Demirer, Tugba – Journal of Educational Research and Practice, 2023
The aim of our study was to investigate the effect of scenario-based learning on eighth-grade students' perceptions of scientists. We used a semiexperimental design to conduct our research with 36 students from the eighth grade, who were divided into experimental and control groups. We collected the data through a "Draw-a-Scientist…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Grade 8, Vignettes, Student Attitudes
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Ersin Yagan; Süleyman Avci – International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies, 2023
Stereotype threat occurs when educational institutions remind us of the stereotype that men are more successful in mathematics and that women's mathematics achievement is negatively affected. In this study, the effect of stereotype threat on the academic achievement of high school students was examined. In the designed experimental study, there…
Descriptors: Stereotypes, Mathematics Achievement, High School Students, Females
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Matthew R. Deroo; Daryl Axelrod; Jennifer Kahn – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2025
This manuscript examines multimodal storytelling as community inquiry for an urban high school class of 30 first- and second-generation bi/multilingual immigrant students, most of whom maintained transnational connections. We share how these students, in an A.P. Research class, engaged in community-based inquiry and utilized various multimodal…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, High School Students, Immigrants, Advanced Placement
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Mike Karlin; Anne Ottenbreit-Leftwich; Yin-Chan Janet Liao – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2024
While a growing emphasis has been placed on broadening participation in computer science (CS) education, an enduring gender gap exists. One reason for this is gender-based CS stereotypes, which serve as gatekeepers and act in exclusionary ways. However, some high schools in the U.S. have still built gender-inclusive CS programs. We conducted a…
Descriptors: High Schools, Computer Science Education, Gender Differences, Stereotypes
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