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Showing 1 to 15 of 34 results Save | Export
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Clarke, Aaron – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
In this article, I theorize school abolition as a shift needed to unsettle education within current times of ecological precarity. As a practice and horizon, abolition reorganizes schooling's ruling episteme by articulating humanity as a collective performance beyond the pedagogical paradigms of western man. Because racial capitalist schooling…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Theories, Humanism, Climate
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Flores, Jerry; Alfaro, Andrea Román – Curriculum Inquiry, 2022
Critical pedagogy scholars have described teaching as an act of love. This love is not a trivial emotion but a conscious action that demonstrates care, respect, honesty, listening, and solidarity. However, translating love and other principles of critical pedagogy into the classroom can be complex and painful. This article discusses our…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Caring, Psychological Patterns, Juvenile Justice
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Guillory, Nichole A. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2021
The article is meant to be a discursive libationary tribute to Audre Lorde's theorizing on Black women's survival. An example of Taliaferro-Baszile's critical race/feminist currere and Pinar's curriculum as complicated conversation, the article brings together Lorde's voice with those of other Black women to analyze my past, present, and future. I…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, Critical Theory, Race
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Coles, Justin A. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2020
Curriculum within the US was birthed in a context of antiblackness and continues to operate as anti-Black through imagining Black youth as less than and uneducable. However, despite the ways educational space has historically worked to image Black children and communities through deficit lenses, the creation of non-traditional Black curricular…
Descriptors: Racial Bias, Blacks, Curriculum, Critical Theory
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Rodríguez, Noreen Naseem – Curriculum Inquiry, 2020
Difficult histories that may contradict national values are rarely taught in elementary schools. This comparative study of two elementary educators examines their pedagogical approaches to the teaching of Japanese American incarceration as difficult history. Framed by Asian American critical race theory, the teachers' practices revealed challenges…
Descriptors: War, Japanese Americans, United States History, Elementary School Students
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Vickery, Amanda E.; Salinas, Cinthia S. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
This qualitative case study investigates how two preservice elementary teachers crafted narratives of Black women in the Civil Rights Movement using an intersectional lens. Using Black feminism and Black critical patriotism as theoretical frameworks, the authors examine the process in which preservice teachers attempted to construct historical…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, African Americans, Females, Feminism
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Annamma, Subini Ancy; Handy, Tamara – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
Classroom and behaviour management are often touted as ways to build relationships in the classroom. Yet conceptions of classroom and behaviour management often focus on controlling or eradicating student behaviour; these carceral logics limit the ways educators can build classroom relationships focused on love and respect. Moreover, classroom and…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Disabilities, Race, Student Behavior
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Thomas, Rhianna – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
In my second year teaching at the elementary level, two biracial first graders told a Black child that she could not play because her skin was too dark. I found myself, a white female teacher, using the language of the bullying prevention programme to ignore the racialized nature of the incident and ultimately enact a hidden curriculum of white…
Descriptors: Bullying, Prevention, Racial Bias, Social Bias
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Snaza, Nathan – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
At stake in contemporary US racial tensions is a struggle over the meaning of being "human." By drawing on black feminist theories of being human as verb, and minority discourse critiques of humanism, the paper links "racialization" to apparatuses of humanization that emerge in early modernity including slavery, colonization,…
Descriptors: Feminism, Criticism, Minority Groups, Humanism
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Chang, Benjamin – Curriculum Inquiry, 2019
This article engages various works of Allan Luke that innovatively use his personal and family narratives within his intersectional, interdisciplinary, and transnational engagements of education and social science research. The article looks at some of the contributions that Luke's work makes to the literature, particularly within the context of…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Foreign Countries, Personal Narratives, Social Science Research
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Sabzalian, Leilani – Curriculum Inquiry, 2018
In this article I provide a brief overview of feminist standpoint theories, as well as how Native feminist theories complicate and enrich this political and epistemic tradition. Following this overview, I introduce Wayne Au's conception of curricular standpoint theory as a contemporary and productive use of feminist standpoint theory to address…
Descriptors: Feminism, Educational Theories, Curriculum Development, Critical Theory
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Hung, Cheng-Yu – Curriculum Inquiry, 2018
In early 2014, a group of senior high school teachers initiated a series of campaigns to fight against the government's imposition of a revised history and citizenship education curriculum, an unprecedented display of opposition in the history of public schools in Taiwan. They rose above the traditional stereotype of the schoolteacher common…
Descriptors: Social Change, National Curriculum, Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes
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Holohan, Kevin J. – Curriculum Inquiry, 2017
This paper aims to interrogate Freirean critical pedagogy via the work of Jacques Lacan in order to shed new light on psychoanalytic issues that arise when engaging in critical pedagogical work. First, through a close reading of Freire's "Pedagogy of the Oppressed," the author delineates Freire's conception of the human subject, the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Critical Theory, Teaching Methods, Power Structure
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de Oliveira, Thiago Ranniery Moreira; Lopes, Danielle Bastos – Curriculum Inquiry, 2016
Humanism and the concept of the human that informs pedagogical discourse have been increasingly questioned by what has been called "post-human times." In this paper, we situate Paulo Freire's (1970) "Pedagogy of the Oppressed," and Nathan Snaza and John Weaver's (2014) "Posthumanism and Educational Research" within…
Descriptors: Humanism, Critical Theory, Foreign Countries, Curriculum Development
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Sembiante, Sabrina – Curriculum Inquiry, 2016
New challenges in education, stemming from the forces of globalization and the continued diversification of the student body, illuminate the need for a reexamination of the role of language in curriculum studies. Through a discussion of the issues around multilingualism and translanguaging and the shift in perspective that these topics have…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Epistemology, Bilingual Education, Critical Theory
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