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Showing 1 to 15 of 111 results Save | Export
Michael V. Singh – Harvard Educational Review, 2024
In this qualitative study, Michael V. Singh deconstructs how and why Latino men teachers are asked to perform a culturally relevant manhood in the classroom. He looks at the ways these teachers experience and navigate the heteropatriarchal expectations associated with their teaching and gender performance, which are often (mis) framed as…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Minority Group Teachers, Males, Culturally Relevant Education
Hernando-Lloréns, Belén – Harvard Educational Review, 2023
In this historical inquiry, Belén Hernando-Lloréns uses the case of one young Spanish woman who was suspended for wearing a hijab to school to argue that norms of convivencia in culturally and racially diverse educational spaces work as a practice of abjection that excludes in the name of inclusion. She examines three strategies that made this…
Descriptors: Clothing, Student Diversity, Females, Muslims
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Cormier, Christopher J. – Harvard Educational Review, 2022
In this research article, Christopher J. Cormier analyzes interviews he conducted with five Black male US special education teachers to understand how they experienced social ties in the workplace. The interviews reveal the raced and gendered dynamics that complicated the interviewees' relationships with their predominantly White and female…
Descriptors: African American Teachers, Males, Special Education Teachers, Teacher Attitudes
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
Cynthia Carolina Terán López; Christina Convertino – Harvard Educational Review, 2024
In this essay, Cynthia Carolina Terán López and Christina Convertino present a new mentoring model for Latina doctoral students, the echémonos flores mentoring model (FEMM), which draws on the ideas of new tribalism and nos/otras in Gloria Anzaldúa's post-Borderlands work and the praxis of pláticas, or conversations, and testimonios to decenter…
Descriptors: Latin Americans, Females, Hispanic Americans, Doctoral Students
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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
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Nikolaidis, A. C.; Thompson, Winston C. – Harvard Educational Review, 2021
Rule violations are expected in schools, and assessments of the severity of those violations and the appropriate disciplinary responses are a significant aspect of educators' responsibilities. While most educators and policy makers reject rule violation as a permissible behavior in schools, is such a categorical rejection always a suitable…
Descriptors: Standards, Compliance (Psychology), Student Behavior, Discipline
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Harper Benjamin Keenan – Harvard Educational Review, 2021
In this article, Harper B. Keenan investigates the treatment of violence in elementary history education through a case study of a fourth-grade unit on the colonial history of California featuring "the mission project," a long-standing tradition in California's elementary schools that has students construct a miniature model of a Spanish…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Elementary Education, Grade 4, United States History
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Freidus, Alexandra – Harvard Educational Review, 2020
This article examines the ways Hazel, a white girl entering kindergarten, became known as a child with a problem rather than a problem child in her gentrifying school. Building on a year of classroom observations and interviews with students, school staff, and parents, author Alexandra Freidus identifies the role of racialized discourses related…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Behavior Problems, Racial Bias, Family Influence
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Shah, Niral – Harvard Educational Review, 2019
In this conceptual article, Niral Shah critically analyzes how the narrative that "Asians are good at math" positions Asian people as racial subjects. Despite being false, the "Asians are good at math" narrative is prominent in STEM education and is also familiar to the general public. To analyze the narrative's discursive…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Asians, Racial Bias, Social Justice
Kelsey A. Dalrymple; Joel M. Phillips – Harvard Educational Review, 2024
In this article examining the history of social emotional learning (SEL) in the United States, Kelsey A. Dalrymple and Joel M. Phillips use an intellectual history approach to demonstrate that the development of contemporary SEL was significantly influenced by different sociocultural, political, and economic factors. They highlight how…
Descriptors: Social Emotional Learning, Educational History, Social Influences, Political Influences
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Carey, Roderick L. – Harvard Educational Review, 2019
In this essay, Roderick L. Carey draws from social-psychological perspectives on mattering to argue that Black boys and young men have yet to achieve comprehensive mattering in social and educational contexts. Positing that Black boys and young men find their social and school lives framed by marginal mattering, which is realized through social…
Descriptors: Males, Social Bias, Educational Environment, Racial Bias
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Tannis, Lynette N. – Harvard Educational Review, 2017
In this "Harvard Educational Review" symposium article, Lynette N. Tannis provides an in-depth look at the juncture of education and incarceration. Tannis states that the denial and/or lack of educational programs within carceral settings are concerning given the size of the US prison system. Discourse about the intersection of education…
Descriptors: Institutionalized Persons, Correctional Institutions, Racial Differences, Social Bias
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Thorius, Kathleen A. King; Waitoller, Federico R. – Harvard Educational Review, 2017
Here Kathleen A. King Thorius and Federico R. Waitoller respond to "Harvard Educational Review's" Spring 2017 forum on their 2016 article "Cross-Pollinating Culturally Sustaining Pedagogy and Universal Design for Learning: Toward an Inclusive Pedagogy That Accounts for Dis/Ability." The forum invited six scholars from the field…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Culturally Relevant Education, Access to Education, Inclusion
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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
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