NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Audience
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results Save | Export
Swalwell, Katy; Rodríguez, Noreen Naseem; Updegraff, Amy; Winters, Leslie Ann – Harvard Educational Review, 2023
In this article authors Katy Swalwell, Noreen Naseem Rodríguez, Amy Updegraff, and Leslie Ann Winters share findings from their critical content analysis of the free preK--5 resources for antiracist, social justice teaching in the Teachers Pay Teachers' Teach for Justice collection. Using Picower's (2012) six elements of social justice curriculum…
Descriptors: Elementary School Curriculum, Curriculum Design, Social Justice, Racism
Giroux, Henry A. – Harvard Educational Review, 2023
In the past ten years radical educators have developed several theories around the notions of reproduction and resistance. In this article, Henry Giroux critically analyzes the major positions of these theories, finding them inadequate as a foundation for a critical science of schooling. He concludes by outlining the directions for a new theory of…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Power Structure, Personal Autonomy, Social Justice
Elena Aydarova – Harvard Educational Review, 2023
In recent years, a wave of science of reading (SOR) reforms have swept across the nation. Although advocates argue that these are based on science-based research, SOR remains a contested and ambiguous notion. In this essay, Elena Aydarova uses an anthropology of policy approach to analyze advocacy efforts that promoted SOR reforms and legislative…
Descriptors: Reading Research, Educational Change, Reading Instruction, Educational Policy
Jennifer L. McCarthy Foubert – Harvard Educational Review, 2023
In this article, Jennifer L. McCarthy Foubert draws attention to Black parents' collective school engagement. Applying critical race theory's critique of liberalism as a theoretical frame, she argues that Black parents who participated in her qualitative multicase study resisted white supremacy as they engaged for the collective in everyday school…
Descriptors: African Americans, Parents, Resistance (Psychology), Racism
Jacob Pleasants; Daniel G. Krutka; T. Philip Nichols – Harvard Educational Review, 2023
In this essay, Jacob Pleasants, Dani el G. Krutka, and T. Philip Nichols outline a vision for how technology education can and ought to occur through the core subject areas of science, social studies, and English language arts. In their argument for the development of a technoskeptical stance for thinking critically and making informed decisions…
Descriptors: Science Education, Social Studies, Language Arts, Technology Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Lenhoff, Sarah Winchell; Singer, Jeremy; Stokes, Kimberly; Mahowald, James Bear; Khawaja, Sahar – Harvard Educational Review, 2022
This essay combines an ecological perspective with a mobility justice theoretical framework to reconceptualize the relationship between school transportation and educational access. Authors Sarah Winchell Lenhoff, Jeremy Singer, Kimberly Stokes, James Bear Mahowald, and Sahar Khawaja document the problem of "getting to school" that is at…
Descriptors: Bus Transportation, Student Transportation, Social Justice, Access to Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Museus, Samuel D. – Harvard Educational Review, 2022
In this qualitative study, Samuel D. Museus analyzes how relative racialization processes and their dynamics shape Asian American college students' racial justice activism. The findings from his qualitative interviews with activist Asian American undergraduates reveal how these students perceived relative racialization processes as raising…
Descriptors: Racism, Asian American Students, Social Justice, Activism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Tanchuk, Nicolas; Rocha, Tomas; Kruse, Marc – Harvard Educational Review, 2021
The concept of privilege is widely used in social justice education to denote unearned advantages accrued by members of dominant groups through the oppression of subordinate groups. In this conceptual essay, Nicolas Tanchuk, Tomas Rocha, and Marc Kruse argue that an atomistic conception of advantage implicit in the discourse of privilege supports…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Multicultural Education, African American Education, American Indian Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Poza, Luis E. – Harvard Educational Review, 2021
In this essay, Luis E. Poza argues that educational dignity can help practices and reforms targeting students classified as English learners move beyond a narrow focus on programmatic and material factors related to English language development and instead toward more holistic consideration of these students and their schooling ecologies. In…
Descriptors: English Language Learners, Second Language Learning, Holistic Approach, Human Dignity
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Conway, Patrick Filipe – Harvard Educational Review, 2020
This article takes up the central question of how college-level prison education programs should be justified and defended. Author Patrick Filipe Conway argues that the focus on recidivism rates as justification for major initiatives like the Second Chance Pell Program and New York governor Andrew Cuomo's Right Priorities initiative is misguided…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Correctional Education, Institutionalized Persons, Correctional Institutions
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Moyer, Jeffrey S.; Warren, Mark R.; King, Andrew R. – Harvard Educational Review, 2020
The use of narratives and storytelling has become an increasingly common strategy in grassroots organizing and advocacy efforts to influence policy change. Drawing on qualitative interviews and observations, Jeffrey Moyer, Mark Warren, and Andrew King present a case study of the successful campaign by Voices of Youth in Chicago Education (VOYCE)…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Advocacy, Public Policy, Correctional Institutions
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Mirra, Nicole; Garcia, Antero – Harvard Educational Review, 2020
In this essay, Nicole Mirra and Antero Garcia explore how young people from six demographically distinct communities across the United States understand the social and political issues affecting their lives, engage in storytelling and dialogue across differences, and collaboratively imagine humanizing and hopeful civic futures. Drawing from…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Political Issues, Story Telling, Dialogs (Language)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
McCullough, Alan, Jr.; Morrell, Felton, Jr.; Thomas, Bernard, III; Waugh, Vicente; Shubert, Nicholas; Donofrio, Amy – Harvard Educational Review, 2020
In this reflective essay, Alan McCullough Jr., Felton Morrell Jr., Bernard Thomas III, Vincente Waugh, and Nicholas Shubert with their teacher, Amy Donofrio, share the youth self-authorship methods that empowered them to transform their labels from "at-risk youth" to "at-hope youth leaders" in Jacksonville, Florida. After…
Descriptors: Violence, Crime, Story Telling, Youth
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Wu, Jinting – Harvard Educational Review, 2020
In this research article, Jinting Wu examines the lived experiences of mothers raising and educating children with disabilities in contemporary China. In the national project of cultivating "quality" citizens, and in the individual pursuit of successful child-rearing, mothers of special children in China are viewed as deficient for…
Descriptors: Mothers, Child Rearing, Foreign Countries, Disabilities
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Chang, Ethan – Harvard Educational Review, 2019
In this comparative ethnographic case study, Ethan Chang examines the politics of digital education reform. Drawing on new institutional theory and boundary work, he investigates how two digital technology nonprofit organizations in California drew boundaries to define themselves and ensure their survival in a competitive organizational field. He…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Educational Change, Educational Technology, Academic Achievement
Previous Page | Next Page »
Pages: 1  |  2