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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
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Cynthia Trililani; Annadís Greta Rúdólfsdóttir; Kristiina Brunila – Whiteness and Education, 2024
Despite the diversity and inclusion efforts of higher education institutions, immigrant and minority students frequently experience marginalisation that adversely affects their academic progress. In this article, we examine the under-researched population of immigrant women in Icelandic universities. Drawing on the intersectionality perspective,…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Females, College Students, Student Experience
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Marie-Odile Magnan; Tya Collins; Fahimeh Darchinian; Pierre Canisius Kamanzi; Véronique Valade – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2024
This study aims to shed light on the role of the university as a space contributing to (re)production and even to the reification of social relations of race. To do this, we sought the views of 30 students enrolled in first-year undergraduate studies to analyze how institutional racism occurs through microaggression interactions, i.e. subjective…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Empowerment, Undergraduate Students, Equal Education
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Thoma, Nadja – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2023
This article argues for the significance of biographical theory in research on raciolinguistic ideologies in education. It accounts for biographies as a basis for the study of the ways in which students conceive the languages, social spaces and power relations which shape processes of inclusion and exclusion. Taking anti-Muslim discourses in…
Descriptors: Ideology, Muslims, Racism, Language Usage
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Mu, Guanglun Michael; Pang, Bonnie – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
In this paper, we engage with Chinese diasporas research through recourse to Bourdieu's relational, reflexive sociology. We start with the historical and recent developments of Chinese diasporas research and point out the potential of using Bourdieu to strengthen the theoretical underpinnings of this research. While we see a steady stream of…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Asians, Sociology, History
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Alana Butler – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2023
This paper explores 'decolonial love' as a pedagogy of care among 16 first generation Black immigrants enrolled in predominantly White four- year colleges in the United States and Canada. The term 'decolonial love' and extensions of this original conceptualization focus on radical self-love and resistance to colonial oppression. Scholars have also…
Descriptors: Blacks, Immigrants, Predominantly White Institutions, Student Experience
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Chen, Grace A. – Cognition and Instruction, 2020
This paper draws on Ahmed's construct of "affective economies" to explore the role of affect in explaining how marginalization becomes (re)produced in pre-service teachers' encounters with an actor playing a Kurdish refugee mother in a simulated parent-teacher conference. Through an interpretive case study of four matched-pair…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Preservice Teachers, Parent Teacher Cooperation, Interpersonal Relationship
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Tajrobehkar, Bahar – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2023
This study examines the social experiences of Iranian female immigrants in schools in Toronto, Canada. Drawing on postcolonial theory and critical whiteness studies, I interrogate the ways in which 'Oriental' subjects are Othered among their peers, and how whiteness is established as the invisible norm. This study observes the role that having an…
Descriptors: Females, Immigrants, Postcolonialism, Whites
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Lillie, Karen – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2021
This article investigates elite young people's transitions from the Leysin American School in Switzerland, an elite secondary school, to international higher education. These young people often moved to the UK or the US for higher education -- locations associated with global status in the education market. However, I argue, new configurations of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Secondary School Students, Advantaged, Selective Admission
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Schoorman, Dilys; Zainuddin, Hanizah; Sena, Sister Rachel – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2020
This study investigates the role of a family literacy program in facilitating critical literacy among Maya immigrant parents as evident in their ability to navigate inhospitable institutional structures, re-writing their role as advocates for their children in school decision making. The study highlights the conscientization that emerged among…
Descriptors: Critical Literacy, Maya (People), Immigrants, Family Literacy
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Mallman, Mark; Harvey, Andrew; Szalkowicz, Giovanna; Moran, Anthony – Studies in Higher Education, 2021
Research on intercultural interactions in higher education focuses on measuring student attitudes and degrees of cosmopolitanism, but there is little theoretically and empirically informed effort to understand 1) the nature of these campus interactions as ordinary, embodied, and routine, and 2) the cultural and social impact of campus…
Descriptors: Intercultural Communication, Interaction, Sense of Community, College Students
Verenisse Ponce Soria – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The U.S. South, in spite of its racist Jim Crow era laws and political history, has the fastest growing Latine immigrant population in the country. In North Carolina alone, the Latine population is responsible for over one-third of the state's growth exceeding all other population groups. Despite this rapid-growing change, the state is third to…
Descriptors: Parent Teacher Cooperation, Hispanic American Students, Immigrants, United States History
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Van Katwyk, Trish; Zagada, Shella; Grande, Santiago – Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 2020
This paper is an exploration of the ways in which power is enacted and reproduced within the academy, as well as a consideration of possibilities for growth at both the personal and the institutional levels. The authors worked together in an academic setting. One of the authors is a tenured faculty member, and the other two authors were staff…
Descriptors: Power Structure, College Faculty, Neoliberalism, Altruism
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Souza, Ana; Arthur, Linet – Management in Education, 2020
Leadership in complementary schools is an under-researched area. This article aims to address this gap in the literature by reporting on a study which focused on Brazilian complementary schools in the United Kingdom. Distributed leadership was initially adopted as a theoretical framework to analyse the relationship between leadership style and…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Communities of Practice, Leadership Styles, Foreign Countries
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Vandeyar, Saloshna – Higher Education Research and Development, 2020
This study set out to explore how Black immigrant academics (BIAs) reconstruct their identities within academe. Utilising the research methodology of narrative inquiry, this article explores how BIAs came to see themselves across those communities, which were of primary importance to them in the reformation of their identities. Through the…
Descriptors: Blacks, Immigrants, College Faculty, Self Concept
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Choi, Jung-ah; Lim, Jae Hoon – Multicultural Learning and Teaching, 2021
This paper is a self-reflective narrative of our teaching experience as two immigrant Asian female professors who teach Multicultural Education. Employing collaborative autoethnography (CAE), the study addresses the issues of authority, positionality, and legitimacy of knowledge claims in critical feminist pedagogy. Two research questions guided…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Women Faculty, Asian Americans, Feminism
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