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Showing 1 to 15 of 39 results Save | Export
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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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Desai, Chandni; Ziadah, Rafeef – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
In this article we examine the "Lotus: Afro-Asian Writings" journal as an insurgent space that reflected Afro-Asian solidarity. We argue that Lotus constituted "infrastructures of dissent" and "infrastructures of solidarity" which were constructed between different anti-colonial movements. Though "Lotus" was…
Descriptors: Memory, Teaching Methods, Colonialism, Periodicals
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Sara Weuffen; Kevin Lowe; Rose Amazan; Katherine Thompson – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2024
The purpose of this conceptual paper is to posit a possible reason why non-Indigenous educators are seen to be 'cautious' in their pedagogic engagement with First Nations perspectives in curriculum, why interventions and programmess around reconciliation and truth-telling have limited traction in affecting change in school culture, and why the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Colonialism, Indigenous Populations, Teaching Methods
Stephen Russell Mallory – ProQuest LLC, 2021
This dissertation examines how analog and digital history games complicate and challenge the dominant discourse of teaching American History through Texas state high school-focused texts and these texts complicity in suppressing non-normative histories. These histories are formed at the intersection of political, social, and cultural power…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Thinking Skills, Educational Games
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Caylin Louis Moore – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2024
How can disproportionate elite political, economic, and social power -- the essence of inequality -- be challenged peacefully and democratically with empowerment from below through critical pedagogy? Paraguay presents a fascinating case study to address this question, especially considering how its history of colonization, authoritarianism, and…
Descriptors: Authoritarianism, Colonialism, Transformative Learning, Critical Theory
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Luiza Lana Gonçalves; Hayley Morrison; Kristi Mally; Tim Fletcher – Sport, Education and Society, 2025
Despite the long history of the idea of democratic education, the articulation of how teacher educators enact democratic practices remains elusive. The purpose of this research was to examine how we understand and enact democratic principles in our physical education teacher education (PETE) practices. Self-Study of Teacher Education Practices…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Physical Education, Physical Education Teachers, Teacher Educators
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Glick, Stephanie – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2023
This paper conceptualises one possible antidote to the conditions that produce public mass gun violence (PMGV) in the United States. I begin by illuminating how PMGV is a backlash to the nation's 'founding' on the violent divisions of colonisation and coloniality. I then inquire: If PMGV is a reflection of a deep societal wound, what methodologies…
Descriptors: Violence, Weapons, Political Influences, United States History
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Ayers, Rick – Multicultural Education Review, 2019
This paper argues that the Trump phenomenon is not an anomaly but rather a predictable stage of the waning of US power. The United States has enjoyed military and economic dominance of the world since the early twentieth century when it gained control of the massive Third World colonial regions of the world. We must regard education as the human…
Descriptors: International Relations, Power Structure, Civil Rights, Community Needs
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Rose, Nicholas; Lourival, Izo – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2019
National and global food systems are beset by intersecting and mutually reinforcing crises of public and ecological health. The locus of these crises resides primarily in the excessive concentration of corporate power and control. Deploying a Gramscian theory of politics as a contribution to the ongoing development of a critical food-based…
Descriptors: Food, Environmental Education, Teaching Methods, Public Health
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Fischman, Gustavo; Sales, Sandra – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2018
Why bother thinking about Freire today? Who cares about the accuracy or lack of it in the translation of his books? In 2018 after 50 years of the original publication of "Pedagogy of the Oppressed," there is a large industry of people profiting from translating and repeating Freire's ideas -- we are well aware that this text is another…
Descriptors: Books, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories, Role
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Kahl, David H., Jr. – Communication Teacher, 2018
Courses: Professional Speaking, Business and Professional Communication, Environmental Communication, or any course covering topics related to neoliberalism and the environment. Objectives: In this single-class activity, students will first examine the possible environmental effects of fracking near the Bakken Oil Formation in North Dakota.…
Descriptors: Fuels, Industry, Neoliberalism, Communications
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Sosa, Teresa – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2022
Focusing on moments in the English classroom imbued with affective forces that produce racial differentiation is central to the support of classrooms addressing race and racism. This work focuses on an event in an English classroom where race was constructed in ways that disrupted not only silence but habitual ways of social differentiation.…
Descriptors: Race, Racial Bias, Racial Attitudes, Social Differences
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Shin, Jaran – TESOL Journal, 2019
In the context of globalization, teachers of English are no longer expected to cultivate learners' functional and communicative abilities alone; instead, the profession also requires teachers to acknowledge that teaching English is a political act, to discuss how power relations are negotiated through language, and to enrich learners' historical…
Descriptors: History, Fiction, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
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Calabrese Barton, Angela; Greenberg, Day; Kim, Won J.; Brien, Sinead; Roby, ReAnna; Balzer, Micaela; Turner, Carmen; Archer, Louise – Science Education, 2021
Despite the promise of Informal Science Learning settings (ISLs) in supporting youth science engagement in ways that value their experiences and communities, in practice, such opportunities are limited. While some ISLs promote more culturally relevant approaches to science engagement, many still reflect White supremacist and patriarchal worldviews…
Descriptors: Informal Education, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Culturally Relevant Education
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Downey, Kerry – Journal of Museum Education, 2020
This article offers a gender/queer, first-person perspective of the necessary role educators play in the link between museums and local communities who have been historically and systemically oppressed (BIPOC, LGBTQ+, people with disabilities and intersections therein). By linking racial and labor equity, this article argues for a deeper…
Descriptors: Museums, LGBTQ People, Teacher Role, Community Involvement
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