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Showing 1 to 15 of 46 results
Hall, Sioux – Harvard Educational Review, 2011
In this article, Sioux Hall promotes using a strengths-based approach to examine the interruption of the intergenerational cycle of child abuse and explores the strategies that women who were abused by a parent as children used to raise their children without abuse. She documents the mothers' uses of strategies such as vowing to protect and…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Females, Child Rearing, Parenting Styles
Harvard Educational Review, 2011
In 1976, the challenges faced by women of color who pursue careers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields were first brought to national attention by Shirley M. Malcom, Paula Hall, and Janet Brown in a report titled "The Double Bind: The Price of Being a Minority Woman in Science." In commemoration of the 35th…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Females, Labor Market, Minority Groups
Malcom, Lindsey E.; Malcom, Shirley M. – Harvard Educational Review, 2011
In this foreword, Shirley Malcom and Lindsey Malcom speak to the history and current status of women of color in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields. As the author of the seminal report "The Double Bind: The Price of Being a Minority Woman in Science", Shirley Malcom is uniquely poised to give us an insightful…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Science Careers, Career Development, Mathematics
Ong, Maria; Wright, Carol; Espinosa, Lorelle L.; Orfield, Gary – Harvard Educational Review, 2011
In this article, Maria Ong, Carol Wright, Lorelle Espinosa, and Gary Orfield review nearly forty years of scholarship on the postsecondary educational experiences of women of color in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). Their synthesis of 116 works of scholarship provides insight into the factors that influence the retention,…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Females, Disproportionate Representation, Engineering
Espinosa, Lorelle L. – Harvard Educational Review, 2011
Supporting undergraduate achievement in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines is paramount to ensuring our nation's continued scientific and technological advancement. In this quantitative study, Lorelle Espinosa examines the effect of precollege characteristics, college experiences, and institutional setting on the…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Human Capital, Undergraduate Study, Academic Achievement
Reyes, Marie-Elena – Harvard Educational Review, 2011
In this article, Marie-Elena Reyes presents the issues faced by women of color in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) as they transfer from community colleges to universities. Community colleges offer a great potential for diversifying and increasing participation of underrepresented groups in STEM. Many women of color…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Females, College Transfer Students, STEM Education
King, Joyce E. – Harvard Educational Review, 2011
In this essay, Joyce King attempts to interrupt the calculus of human (un)worthiness and to repair the collective cultural amnesia that are legacies of slavery and that make it easy--hegemonically and dysconsciously--for the public to accept myths and media reports, such as those about the depravity of survivors of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans…
Descriptors: Black Studies, Slavery, Foreign Countries, Cultural Background
Kynard, Carmen – Harvard Educational Review, 2010
In this article, Carmen Kynard provides a window into a present-day "hush harbor," a site where a group of black women build generative virtual spaces for counterstories that fight institutional racism. Hidden in plain view, these intentional communities have historically allowed African American participants to share and create knowledge and find…
Descriptors: African American Students, Teaching Methods, Females, Web Sites
Branching out and Coming Back Together: Exploring the Undergraduate Experiences of Young Black Women
Harvard Educational Review, 2010
In January of 2010, "Harvard Educational Review" editor Chantal Francois sat down at a Manhattan diner with three young black women, two of whom were her former students at a New York City high school. Chantal invited the women to come together and share their experiences as freshmen at predominantly white institutions along the East Coast. While…
Descriptors: Females, Womens Education, Womens Studies, African American Students
Carrillo, Juan F. – Harvard Educational Review, 2010
In this powerful essay, Juan F. Carrillo, a teacher educator in Austin, Texas, reflects on an encounter with a first-year Latina teacher, Christina, who has decided to leave the profession. Despite successfully learning and applying critical pedagogy, Christina finds herself isolated and frustrated, stuck between a societal push for standardized…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Career Change, Teacher Educators, Hispanic Americans
Malagon, Maria C.; Alvarez, Crystal R. – Harvard Educational Review, 2010
Drawing from extensive oral history interviews with five Chicana women, Malagon and Alvarez (re)conceptualize the way educational scholarship defines "high achieving." As attendees of California continuation high schools, all five women defy societal expectations by moving from these alternative educational spaces to community colleges, then…
Descriptors: Continuation Students, Oral History, Critical Theory, Females
Anderson-Fye, Eileen P. – Harvard Educational Review, 2010
As in other Latin American and Caribbean nations, young women in Belize have made remarkable strides in enrollment in and completion of secondary schooling. In fact, adolescent girls did so well during the 1990s that the usual explanations of increased access to schooling and governmental policy aimed at increasing girls' education did not appear…
Descriptors: Females, Womens Education, High School Students, Student Motivation
Shavarini, Mitra – Harvard Educational Review, 2009
In this essay, Mitra Shavarini captures the lasting impact of violent political conflict on educational access in postrevolutionary Iran. While the Iranian Revolution took place nearly thirty years ago, its impact continues to reverberate throughout Iranian society, particularly as it relates to the lives of women. Captured here is a powerful…
Descriptors: Females, Foreign Countries, Access to Education, Womens Education
Perez Huber, Lindsay – Harvard Educational Review, 2009
Using the critical race "testimonios" of ten Chicana undergraduate students at a top-tier research university, Lindsay Perez Huber interrogates and challenges the racist nativist framing of undocumented Latina/o immigrants as problematic, burdensome, and "illegal." Specifically, a community cultural wealth framework (Yosso, 2005) is utilized and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Research Universities, Females, Immigrants
Soto, Lourdes Diaz; Cervantes-Soon, Claudia G.; Villarreal, Elizabeth; Campos, Emmet E. – Harvard Educational Review, 2009
The Xicana Sacred Space resulted from an effort to develop a framework that would center the complexities of Chicana ontology and epistemology as they relate to social action projects in our communities. Claiming indigenous roots and ways of knowing, the Xicana Sacred Space functions as a decolonizing tool by displacing androcentric and Western…
Descriptors: Educational Researchers, Epistemology, Philosophy, Identification

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