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Stasha Huntingford – Educational Action Research, 2025
This paper/visual art/puppet show is about the more-than-human entities who help me include my whole self in my teaching and other research. It is about how generative it is to be our whole, sacred, profane, glorious selves. This art reminds us of the importance of dreaming beyond what we have been told is possible. It demonstrates how irreverent,…
Descriptors: Play, Deception, Visual Arts, Puppetry
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Michelle Kwok; Eleanor Su-Keene; Ambyr Rios – Journal of Teacher Education, 2025
Traditionally, preservice teachers (PSTs) have been introduced and socialized to a cartoon of three children attempting to watch a baseball game as the prevailing definition of equity. Yet, in our sociopolitical context where Black, Brown, and LGBTQ+ children are continuously marginalized, we critique whether this simple construction of equity is…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Equal Education, Student Attitudes, Student Diversity
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Xinyue Ren – Distance Education, 2024
With the growth of cultural diversity in online higher education, this qualitative research aimed to investigate instructors' perceptions, practices, and challenges of increasing cultural presence in online course design and delivery. Seventeen instructors with different disciplinary backgrounds, online teaching experiences, titles, and ranks…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Electronic Learning
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Ashley Hinck; Lauren Angelone; Ashley Theuring; Karin Admiraal; Jody Googins; Teresa Young; Wendy Maxian – Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 2024
At the intersection of an ongoing global pandemic and equity-focused social movements, critical and digital pedagogies became both necessary and important. Digital ways of teaching made education possible when we could not be in person, and provided alternative modes of learning and thinking, but also exacerbated existing inequalities. In this…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Critical Theory, Digital Literacy, Personal Narratives
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Joseph, Nicole M.; Hailu, Meseret F.; Matthews, Jamaal Sharif – Harvard Educational Review, 2019
In this article, Nicole Joseph, Meseret Hailu, and Jamaal Matthews argue that Black girls' oppression in the United States is largely related to the dehumanization of their personhood, which extends to various institutions, including secondary schools and, especially, mathematics classrooms. They contend that one way to engage in educational…
Descriptors: African American Students, Females, Mathematics Instruction, Gender Bias