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Russell, Michael; Kaplan, Larry – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2021
Differential Item Functioning (DIF) is commonly employed to examine measurement bias of test scores. Current approaches to DIF compare item functioning separately for select demographic identities such as gender, racial stratification, and economic status. Examining potential item bias fails to recognize and capture the intersecting configurations…
Descriptors: Test Bias, Test Items, Demography, Identification
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Hilma Halme; Jo Van Hoof; Minna Hannula-Sormunen; Jake McMullen – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2024
Background: Research has shown that mathematics anxiety negatively correlates with primary school mathematics performance, including fraction knowledge. However, recently no significant correlation was found between fraction arithmetic performance and state anxiety measured after the fraction task. One possible explanation is the natural number…
Descriptors: Mathematics Anxiety, Elementary School Mathematics, Grade 5, Grade 6
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Tayyaba, Tamim; Ansari, Humayun; Faisal, Bari – Cogent Education, 2022
Post-COVID educational planning demands an urgent re-evaluation of the inclusivity of our educational systems, now that almost 24 million learners, a majority of these girls and the poor in developing countries, are at the risk of dropping out. This paper explores the discursive inclusivity of some primary level textbooks used in government and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equal Education, Elementary Education, Textbooks
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Mbalia, Jendayi – Journal of Urban Learning, Teaching, and Research, 2020
The academic needs of African-American girls too often are not linked to their intersecting identities. These interlocked identities often go unseen, thus are rarely addressed in K-12 schools. Specifically, their identities are neglected in some of their English Language Arts classrooms through the sole use of hegemonic literary practices.…
Descriptors: African American Students, Females, Racial Bias, Gender Bias
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Flavia Mandatori; Gabriel R. Paez; Rhissa Briones Robinson; Rachel E. Severson – Youth & Society, 2025
Data from the 2019 Minnesota Student Survey, consisting of 166,176 students ranging in age from 10 to 18 years, were used to investigate patterns of adolescent suicidal ideation and attempt through the lens of Minority Stress Theory (MST). Through a conjunctive analysis of case configurations (CACC), the current study demonstrates that adolescent…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Suicide, Adolescents, Stress Variables
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Sonu, Debbie – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2022
In this article, the author discusses the work of a public-school teacher in New York City whose commitment to social justice has led to the design and teaching of a lesson that directly addresses the meanings and manifestations of social class with her fourth- and fifth-grade students.
Descriptors: Social Justice, Social Class, Economic Factors, Grade 4
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Widayanti, Costrie Ganes; Fletcher, Jo – Education 3-13, 2023
This paper presents a study that investigated how students labelled as having learning disabilities experienced attributions from their teachers and the impacts of the attributions for these students' learning and interactions. The article explores the phenomena from an attribution theoretical lens. Ethnographic case study underpinned the research…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Learning Disabilities, Labeling (of Persons), Attitudes toward Disabilities
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Thijs, Jochem; Miklikowska, Marta; Bosman, Rianne – Developmental Psychology, 2023
This longitudinal study (three waves across a school year) investigated the links between children's motivations to respond without prejudice and their ethnic outgroup attitudes at the between-person level (means and changes over time) and the within-person level (time-specific fluctuations). Participants were 945 ethnic majority students…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Children, Grade 3, Grade 4
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Riley, Kathryn – Journal of Experiential Education, 2020
Background: Teaching and learning in outdoor experiential education is often conducted on lands with troubled histories of settler colonialism. This calls for new and creative forms of socioecological responsibility to attend to human supremacism and exceptionalism that marginalizes, exploits, dominates, and objectifies Other(s) in these…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Experiential Learning, Social Bias, Racial Bias
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Gabrielli, Sara; Catalano, Maria Gaetana; Maricchiolo, Fridanna; Paolini, Daniele; Perucchini, Paola – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2022
This study evaluated the impact of a school-based program designed to reduce implicit prejudice towards migrants in fifth-grade school children. The program used empathy and perspective taking and direct and indirect contact as strategies to reduce ethnic prejudice. Multiple activities were used, including drawings by migrant children as…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Empathy, Perspective Taking, Intervention
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García-González, Macarena; Véliz, Soledad; Matus, Claudia – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2020
In this article, we explore ways in which arts-based approaches may be deployed to educate ways of knowing/becoming/doing difference differently, particularly when issues of racism and xenophobia come to the front. We present a school research intervention with students and in-service teachers in Santiago, Chile. In this study, we use "The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Picture Books, Racial Bias
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Ankur Nandi; Tarini Halder; Tapash Das – International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies, 2025
Textbooks play a pivotal role as agents of social change, shaping the perspectives and values of students from a young age. Through the content presented in textbooks and the experiences within the classroom, students learn to internalize gender socialization, social norms, beliefs, and roles. These educational materials can also contribute to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Textbooks, Textbook Content, English (Second Language)
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Simon, Mara; Marttinen, Risto; Phillips, Sharon – Sport, Education and Society, 2021
Gender in physical education (PE) traditionally enacts discourses of hegemonic masculinities where girls are frequently positioned as the 'problem' regarding their disengagement. The purpose of this qualitative study was to examine the experiences of mostly ethnic minority and low-socioeconomic status elementary school girls enrolled in an urban…
Descriptors: After School Programs, Gender Bias, Physical Education, Minority Group Students
Faten Baroudi – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The Critical Literacy (CritLit) project promotes using critical texts to engage readers in examining their lived experiences and understanding of social justice issues. This study used a qualitative participatory approach with a narrative design to research the students' engagement in a book club using critical texts. Participants were fourth- and…
Descriptors: Critical Literacy, Social Justice, Books, Clubs
Denis Dumas; Selcuk Acar; Kelly Berthiaume; Peter Organisciak; David Eby; Katalin Grajzel; Theadora Vlaamster; Michele Newman; Melanie Carrera – Grantee Submission, 2023
Open-ended verbal creativity assessments are commonly administered in psychological research and in educational practice to elementary-aged children. Children's responses are then typically rated by teams of judges who are trained to identify original ideas, hopefully with a degree of inter-rater agreement. Even in cases where the judges are…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 3, Grade 4, Grade 5
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