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Showing 1 to 15 of 77 results
Camangian, Patrick Roz – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2013
Breaking down the social, political, and cultural processes through which race, class, and gender worldviews are established, ideological literacies help students look closely at the intricate, contradictory meanings in texts. The purpose of developing ideological literacies in urban youth is so they become more socially conscious of the…
Descriptors: Ideology, Urban Youth, Communication Strategies, Self Concept
Tokunaga, Tomoko; Douthirt-Cohen, Beth – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2012
In 2003, the Japanese Ministry of Education accredited the high school diplomas of most "ethnic high schools," which are schools by and for specific ethnic minority populations, such as Korean, Brazilian, or Chinese students in Japan. Prior to this policy, diplomas from most ethnic high schools were not recognized by the Japanese government as…
Descriptors: High Schools, Equal Education, Foreign Countries, Minority Groups
Lopez, Gretchen E.; Nastasi, A. Wendy – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2012
Given persisting patterns of racial, ethnic, and class re-segregation, this study considers opportunities that high school-aged youth have to cross these divides. What critical learning might occur? What can educators learn from student reflections toward providing opportunities, experiences, or structures to challenge the status quo? In…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Suburban Schools, High School Students, Teaching Methods
Huber, Lindsay Perez; Cueva, Bert Maria – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2012
"Testimonio" in educational research can reveal both the oppression that exists within educational institutions and the powerful efforts in which students of color engage to challenge and transform those spaces. We utilize "testimonio" as a methodological approach to understand how undocumented and U.S.-born Chicana/Latina students experience the…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, Aggression, Hispanic Americans
Cruz, Cindy – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2012
"Testimonio," as a genre of the dispossessed, the migrant, and the queer, is a response to larger discourses of nation-building and has the potential to undermine the larger narratives that often erase and make invisible the expendable and often disposable labor and experiences of immigrants, the working class, African Americans, and others. This…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Critical Thinking, Immigrants, Curriculum Development
Espino, Michelle M.; Vega, Irene I.; Rendon, Laura I.; Ranero, Jessica J.; Muniz, Marcela M. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2012
From Latinas' locations in the margins of academe and society emerges a unique set of challenges complicated by racism, sexism, and classism. One form of resistance to these multiple marginalities involves drawing upon and (re)telling one's lived experience to expose oppression and systemic violence. "Testimonio" is a conceptual and methodological…
Descriptors: Socialization, Knowledge Level, Educational Change, Gender Bias
Gildersleeve, Ryan Evely; Croom, Natasha N.; Vasquez, Philip L. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2011
The graduate school experience for students of color has been theorized as oppressive and dehumanizing (Gay, 2004). Scholars have struggled to document how students of color navigate and negotiate oppressive and dehumanizing conditions in their daily experiences of doctoral education. We provide a critical race analysis of the everyday experiences…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Educational Experience, Critical Theory, Race
Upadhyay, Bhaskar – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2010
The focus of this qualitative study is to document two middle school science teachers' perceptions of social justice and how these teachers implement various aspects of social justice in their science instruction. The two teachers teach science in an urban school that serves students from low-income, immigrant, and ethnic minority families. The…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Urban Schools, Science Teachers, Science Instruction
Thadani, Vandana; Cook, Melissa S.; Griffis, Kathy; Wise, Joe A.; Blakey, Aqila – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2010
Low-income and minority students in the U.S. are disproportionately subjected to didactic, teacher-controlled instruction--a phenomenon called "the pedagogy of poverty" (Haberman, 1991). This study examined the role that curriculum-based interventions could play in addressing these equity issues in science education. Eight teachers from three…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Intervention, Poverty, Student Diversity
Taylor, Dianne L.; Clark, Menthia P. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2009
Data from two previous studies are reanalyzed using the lens of institutional racism to examine district decisions that undermined, or sabotaged, improvement efforts at schools attended by students of color. Opportunities to rectify the sabotage were available but not pursued. A model portrays the interaction between decision-maker intent,…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Educational Improvement, School Districts, Minority Groups
Aleman, Enrique, Jr. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2009
In this article, the author seeks to re-imagine the political and policy roles of educational leaders of color, offering an alternative method for educational leadership, advocacy, and policy analysis. The author uses critical race theory (CRT) and Latina/o critical (LatCrit) theory to problematize the way politically-active Mexican American…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Educational Finance, Criticism, Policy Analysis
Hallman, Heidi L. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2009
This article provides a rich representation of how in-school practices that recruit students' "out-of-school" literacies, such as hip hop, can be used as critical bridges in students' learning. Hip hop, conceptualized in this article as an "out-of-school" literacy, works as a vehicle for curricular change at Eastview School for Pregnant and…
Descriptors: Social Action, At Risk Students, Early Parenthood, Educational Change
Pulido, Isaura – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2009
Using Critical Race and Latino Critical theories, this study examines 20 in-depth interviews conducted by the author with Mexican and Puerto Rican youth from the Chicago area. The author contends that youth utilized hip hop music in multiple and overlapping ways, engaging hip hop music as both a pedagogy that centers the perspectives of people of…
Descriptors: Race, Puerto Ricans, Music, Mexican Americans
Akom, A. A. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2009
This article uses Paulo Freire's problem-posing method, youth participatory action research, and case study methodology to introduce an alternative instructional strategy called Critical Hip Hop Pedagogy (CHHP). This approach attempts to address deep-rooted ideologies to social inequities by creating a space in teacher education courses for…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Educational Strategies, Preservice Teacher Education, Action Research
Baszile, Denise Taliaferro – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2009
Although hip hop culture has been one of the most significant urban youth movements over the last three decades, it has only recently gained attention within the educational literature as a force to be reckoned with. And even then, much of the literature seeks to understand how hip hop can be used to engage students in the official school…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Curriculum Research, Urban Youth, Popular Culture

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