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Showing 1 to 15 of 133 results Save | Export
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Ga Young Chung – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
In this paper, I explore the challenge and promise of developing an anti-racist and anti-colonial curriculum and pedagogy in a time of racialized dread. Drawing on my experience teaching a 10-week course on racial justice, delivered in the Korean language, to 1st generation Korean American seniors in the Southern United States. I explore how the…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Decolonization, Racial Factors, Asian American Students
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Graham B. Slater – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
Accelerating digitization, algorithmic computation, artificial intelligence, and machine learning, along with the increasing automation of work, communication, and everyday life, are central to critical studies of technology and political economy, as well as to public discourse concerning technology's role in creating futures. Ongoing…
Descriptors: Algorithms, Anxiety, Artificial Intelligence, Man Machine Systems
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Brianne Pitts; Dawnavyn James; Gregory Simmons – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
Some Black histories are absolutely dreadful. When we consider enslavement, racial violence, the terrors in the lynching of Emmett Till, the destruction of Tulsa during the Race Massacre, and the intergenerational traumas these events left behind, the residues of dread are made visible. Black histories are in a contentious social-political moment…
Descriptors: African American History, Elementary Secondary Education, Teachers, Educational Strategies
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Tyson E. Lewis – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
This article argues that hope is not an adequate affective response to dread. Indeed, hope and dread are more closely aligned than either critical or postcritical forms of educational philosophy would like to admit. The article proposes a shift from hope to joy as an under appreciated educational affect. To make this claim, the author pivots to…
Descriptors: Expectation, Psychological Patterns, Educational Philosophy, Anxiety
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Flynn, Susan – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
Much has been written about the demands of 'pandemic pedagogy' and the 'online pivot' which have seen educators across the globe move to online teaching. Multiple studies are emerging of these online pedagogies and hasty upskills. Less exploration exists on the educator's own curation of the online self and on the extra workload of teaching…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Self Concept, Faculty Workload, COVID-19
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Filippakou, Ourania – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
In this paper, I explore the current state of higher education with particular--although not exclusive--reference to the issue of neutrality in research, revealing its ambivalences and contradictions. My main concern is less with the complex details of the politics of higher education than with the milieu of the dominant higher education…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Neoliberalism, Educational Policy, Policy Formation
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Sunnemark, Ludvig; Thörn, Håkan – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
Considering globalization as part of a post-colonial conjuncture, the examination of the politics of decolonization is essential to understand key conflicts in global civil society. Recently, a global movement for the decolonization of higher education has played a key role in this context, with the #RhodesMustFall movement being particularly…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Higher Education, Political Issues, Social Change
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Featherstone, Mark – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
In the teeth of the coronavirus crisis the British HE system has been thrown into chaos and the severe limitations of the market model have been cruelly exposed. After thirty years of expansion and increasing neoliberalization, the contradictions of the marketized system have been realized by the virus, pushing the entire sector to the edge of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Universities, Educational Change
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Evans, Brad; Meza, Chantal – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
This essay will address the narcissism of techno-nihilism into which life is being thrown. Written by a political theorist and artist, it looks specifically at the way technology is colonizing the political and artistic imagination. The essay is written over three acts, which traverse the logics of space and time. Act 1 is written by Brad Evans…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Technology Uses in Education, World Views
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Webb, Darren – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
On October 26, 2011, a post appeared on the Occupy Wall Street Library blog titled "I would prefer not to." The constant refrain of Herman Melville's "Bartleby, the Scrivener" became one of Occupy's defining mottos, appearing on placards, T-shirts, and tote bags. The phrase became so symbolic that it was used on the posters…
Descriptors: Activism, Social Action, Politics, Futures (of Society)
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Jarvie, Scott; Segall, Avner; Gaudelli, William – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
No term defined the last U.S. presidency, and public discourse accompanying it, more so than "the Wall" and, with it, the U.S.-Mexico border more broadly. That discourse, however, has mostly been characterized by an a-historic, unproblematized, and under-theorized notion of "border." Our experiences as curriculum scholars and…
Descriptors: Global Education, Curriculum Development, Educational Theories, Educational Practices
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Ellison, Scott; Iqtadar, Shehreen – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
The present study details the theoretical and pedagogical development of an experimental cultural studies in education seminar. Specifically, we explore the societal ends of education, and the means they prefigure, through a meditation on the catastrophe of the present. This will involve theorizing this historical moment, thinking through the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Role of Education, Educational Objectives, Educational Theories
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Rickards, Nicholas G. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
Through the use of horror movie motifs like zombies and mad doctors, "The Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials" (2015) stands in drastic contrast to other young adult dystopian properties like "The Hunger Games" (2012), for example, in that "Scorch Trials" uses allegory as a means to comment on neoliberalism, alienated…
Descriptors: Films, Popular Culture, Young Adults, Social Systems
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Powell, Michelle – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2022
In March 2016 when North Carolina's House Bill 2 (HB2)--the "bathroom bill"--was introduced and passed, I was teaching at a state university in North Carolina (N.C. Gen. Assem., 2016). In the Spring semester of that year, on March 23, HB2 was passed in a 12-hour special session meeting by the North Carolina legislature. The following…
Descriptors: State Legislation, Sanitary Facilities, Social Discrimination, LGBTQ People
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Stahl, Garth – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2022
Recent studies note how the US school reform movement is premised on a policy-making agenda that aims to redress what it sees as the complacent approach of educators who have, as reformers suggest, made poverty an excuse for low achievement levels in economically disadvantaged schools. An increasingly significant pedagogical approach employed to…
Descriptors: Zero Tolerance Policy, Charter Schools, Discipline Policy, Neoliberalism
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