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Simone Marquise Dumas – ProQuest LLC, 2022
African American women in educational leadership roles face a myriad of barriers and challenges. Black feminist theory and impostor phenomenon theory offered a potent conceptual lens for understanding the experiences of successful African American women. A qualitative phenomenological study was conducted to examine and explore strategies that…
Descriptors: Self Esteem, African Americans, Females, Administrators
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Brown, Emily C.; Coker, Angela D. – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2019
A disproportionate number of African American youth experience childhood adversity and situations of loss, including parental incarceration and divorce, while navigating racial discrimination. Ambiguous loss theory offers a conceptual framework to understand these experiences as losses of relationships, stability, and social validation due to…
Descriptors: Intervention, Females, Adolescents, African Americans
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Boveda, Mildred; Reyes, Ganiva; Aronson, Brittany – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
As three teacher educators with familial ties to the Global South, but academically trained within the Global North, we adopt a de/colonial, intersectional feminist lens to analyze the "general education curriculum" in the United States. We use testimonios, each told in first-person, as entry points where we situate the entanglement of…
Descriptors: Females, Minority Group Students, Students with Disabilities, Special Education
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Overstreet, Mikkaka – Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education, 2019
In this autoethnographic article, I explore my experiences as an early career Academic of Color. Drawing on previous theoretical constructions such as the Strong Black Woman schema (SBW), I present these experiences through the lens of DC Comics' Vixen, a Black female superhero. This research highlights systemic disparities in the treatment of…
Descriptors: African American Teachers, Women Faculty, Females, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
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Laura J. Austin; Rebecca K. Browne; Megan Carreiro; Anna G. Larson; Ivana Khreizat; Melissa DeJonckheere; Sarah E. O. Schwartz – Youth & Society, 2025
Despite high rates of mental health concerns among youth, they are unlikely to receive mental health care, with mental health stigma acting as a barrier. The present study explores youth perceptions of the influences of stigma and what should be done to address it, drawing on a large (n = 705) mixed methods dataset of youth aged 14 to 24 from the…
Descriptors: Bullying, Adolescents, Young Adults, Attitudes
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John P. Falcone; Davis Mac-Iyalla – British Journal of Religious Education, 2025
This article explores how a public written response to anti-LGBT+ legislation in Ghana also functioned as a religious educational intervention to shape future visions of tolerant pluralism in Ghanaian society. Navigating the intersection of politics and religion, the Interfaith Diversity Network of West Africa (IDNOWA) lodged a religious objection…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Legislation, Social Bias, LGBTQ People
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Naima Mohammadi – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2025
This paper reports on a qualitative study that explores the experiences of Iranian Muslim female post-graduate students in an Italian higher education institution. Focus groups followed by semi-structured interviews with eight post-graduate Iranian students, including veiled and unveiled females revealed that they had difficulty in achieving their…
Descriptors: Muslims, Females, Womens Education, Graduate Students
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Carla Solvason – British Journal of Special Education, 2025
This article suggests that the rise in referrals for children seen as having specific educational needs in England is the inevitable outcome of a system with ever-rising expectations and accountability. It suggests two key reasons for this. The first is that the increased pressures upon teachers lead to them needing a 'scapegoat' to point the…
Descriptors: Accountability, Referral, Special Needs Students, Foreign Countries
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Maree Martinussen; Neha Singh; Swathi Rangarajan – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2025
Higher education initiatives to support students from low socioeconomic backgrounds are widespread. However, there is pervasive concern within public discourse that such widening participation efforts have contributed to a 'dumbing down' of higher education. There are classed dimensions to evaluations of (dis)advantaged students' university…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Socioeconomic Status, Social Class, Access to Education
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Khama Mashuro; Leonie Gysbertha Higgs – South African Journal of Education, 2025
In this study we critically investigated English as the language of learning and teaching (LoLT) in the Chivi district (Zimbabwe) and the implications of its use as the LoLT for social justice education. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews, focus-group interviews, observation and document analysis. The results show that social…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language of Instruction, Social Justice, English (Second Language)
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Danielle Diver – Educational Theory, 2025
Closed-mindedness is a characteristic trait of irresponsible believers. For this reason and others, educators should actively discourage closed-mindedness in their students. One way to do this is to cultivate its opposing virtue: open-mindedness. Drawing on the work of William Hare, Danielle Diver defends the status of open-mindedness as an…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Student Attitudes, Teacher Role, Persuasive Discourse
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Connor Brown; Evita Huang; Jose Garcia; Anne M. Brown – Discover Education, 2025
Community colleges (CCs) are important American higher education institutions; however, stigmas surrounding CCs might impact the perception of CC students as they transition to a four-year institution. To profile researcher perceptions of transfer students and develop a conceptual model of the perception of CC transfer students by biology,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Science Teachers, Academic Rank (Professional), Community Colleges
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Susett Naranjo-Pou; Izabela Zych – Journal of Adolescence, 2025
Introduction: Expressions of cyberhate motivated by characteristics such as gender, ethnicity, and religious beliefs are now present and prevalent on social networks. Past research, both in online and offline contexts, has identified that, although there may be an overlap between victims and perpetrators of violence; this is not always the case.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Victims, Bullying, Computer Mediated Communication
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Tom Bielik; Moritz Krell – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
In science education, epistemic vigilance plays a key role in the development of students' critical thinking by supporting students' abilities to evaluate the expertise level of the source and to evaluate the claim itself, using rigorous scientific standards and appropriate argumentation heuristics. Based on previous studies, which suggested two…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Science Education, Science Process Skills, Skill Development
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Tin L. Nguyen; Alexis L. d'Amato; Scarlett R. Miller; Samuel T. Hunter – Creativity Research Journal, 2025
Emerging theory and evidence suggest that intergroup relations may stimulate malevolent creativity, but the intergroup foundations of malevolent creativity remain unexplored. Drawing from theories of intergroup conflict, we argue that malevolent creativity can be understood through the lens of parochial altruism, one's willingness to partake in…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Group Behavior, Group Unity, Group Dynamics
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