Publication Date
In 2025 | 238 |
Since 2024 | 1555 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 4351 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 4598 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 4625 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Teachers | 90 |
Administrators | 30 |
Researchers | 19 |
Policymakers | 17 |
Practitioners | 16 |
Students | 16 |
Community | 9 |
Counselors | 9 |
Parents | 6 |
Location
California | 146 |
Canada | 130 |
United States | 84 |
Australia | 71 |
Texas | 70 |
New York (New York) | 62 |
United Kingdom | 60 |
North Carolina | 44 |
South Africa | 41 |
China | 39 |
United Kingdom (England) | 39 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Jennifer Phuong; Lilly Padía; Maggie R. Beneke – Theory Into Practice, 2024
Abolition is a verb, referencing how people build safe conditions while dismantling (and developing solutions beyond) harmful institutions, including within education. Considering disability justice movement work in our roles as teacher educators, we explored how we might contend with the harmful purposes and functions of educational structures as…
Descriptors: Attitudes toward Disabilities, Social Bias, Teacher Education, Social Justice
Emy Chen; Cathery Yeh – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
We -- as daughter and mother -- offer our stories humbly as a love letter to our Asian American community, our Black and Brown siblings, and the broader education community. White supremacy has weaponized the model minority myth -- the belief that Asian Americans have "made it" despite obstacles -- to invalidate claims of systemic racism…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Minority Groups, Asian Americans, Racism
Maggie R. Beneke; María Cioé-Peña; Valentina Migliarini – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
In justice movements, solidarity means showing up for the humanity of others. This paper explores DisCrit mothering as a form of solidarity with children and families dehumanized by ableism and racism. As three motherscholars, who occupy varying spaces of privilege/marginalization in the academy, we reflect on our attempts to support our…
Descriptors: Mothers, Disabilities, Critical Race Theory, Parenting Styles
Ashley N. Robinson – Innovative Higher Education, 2024
Striving antiracist frontline student affairs educators work from commitments to racial equity and racial justice. Yet, when responding to racist harms, they must navigate institutional investigative practices. In this institutional ethnographic study of a Predominantly and Historically White Institution (PHWI), despite frontline educators' aims,…
Descriptors: Student Personnel Services, Student Personnel Workers, Universities, Racism
Demetrius Cofield – Metropolitan Universities, 2024
The increase in the prevalence of mental illness among Black millennials has led to more awareness and advocacy within the generation. However, Black millennial men are still utilizing counseling services at significantly lower rates than millennial Black women and men of other races. Consequently, this leads to an increase in suicide completions…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Access to Health Care, Barriers, African Americans
Victor Javier Rodriguez – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Scholars Leonard & Woodland (2022) suggest schools and districts face a crucial challenge. Are schools and districts ensuring their personnel are prepared to engage in critical practices to affirm, include, and support all students, families, peers, and communities? Or are schools and districts just haphazardly committing to diversity, equity,…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Public Schools, Teacher Attitudes, Program Effectiveness
April Lovett – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Staff members in institutions of higher education who are not faculty, such as those who work in student affairs, information technology, student business services, and other areas, may feel invisible and unappreciated. This sense of obscurity for racially marginalized staff can be intensified by discrimination and oppression that persist within…
Descriptors: Employee Attitudes, Predominantly White Institutions, Minority Groups, Professional Personnel
Stephen A. Vinson – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This dissertation utilizes a basic qualitative exploratory approach to examine the schooling experiences of eight Black high school males in a predominantly White community. It seeks to understand how they define and make sense of their own mental health and well-being through a theoretical framework of Mental Health and Well-being: A…
Descriptors: Males, Student Attitudes, High School Students, Whites
Yang Li – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This study illuminates the nuanced experiences of Asian international women students in Computer and Mathematical Sciences, and Engineering doctoral programs in the United States, a domain historically shaped by male dominance, White supremacy, and Western ideologies. While existing literature on gender and racial-ethnic disparities in Science,…
Descriptors: Intersectionality, STEM Education, Females, College Students
Jenny O. Arras – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This narrative study explored the ways in which two Black male undergraduate students experienced and situated their identity in their first-year composition (FYC) courses. The study sought to reveal how the participants experienced stereotype threat in both the classroom and larger community and the ways in which this perceived threat impacted…
Descriptors: African American Students, Males, Undergraduate Students, Ethnic Stereotypes
Heidi Cian; Remy Dou – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
How individuals come to perceive themselves in STEM is predicated on their understanding of what it means to be a member of the STEM community. This association is consequential when considering the perpetuation of white male ownership of STEM knowledge and power that forces learners identifying with groups systemically marginalized by racial and…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Student Interests, Masculinity, College Students
Aaron Rabinowitz – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2024
HBO's "Lovecraft Country" is a model resource for developing speculative civic literacies, which are forms of meaning making aimed at helping students conceive of a more equitable democratic society. Speculative civic literacies and "Lovecraft Country" both center the tension between Afrofuturism and Afropessimism in the…
Descriptors: Television, Popular Culture, Afrocentrism, Fiction
Blessing N. Marandure; Jess Hall; Saima Noreen – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
It is widely acknowledged that there is an awarding gap in higher education, with proportionally more White students achieving a good honours degree compared to their minoritized ethnic counterparts. Furthermore, the gap is largest between Black and White students, hence necessitating initiatives to understand the perspectives of Black students on…
Descriptors: African American Students, College Students, Student Attitudes, Awards
Kaleb L. Briscoe; Lucy A. LePeau; Dawn R. Johnson – Journal of College Student Development, 2024
Attacks on diversity, equity, and inclusion threaten to undo much of the work of creating and maintaining diverse learning and working environments for students, faculty, and staff. In honor of ACPA's 100th anniversary, we reflect on the current threats to the campus racial climate, highlight research that informs our scholarship and practice, and…
Descriptors: College Environment, Racism, Diversity, Equal Education
Kevin Lawrence Henry Jr. – Educational Policy, 2024
The linking of school choice and charter schools to the legacy of Black alternative education and civil rights initiatives is a central discursive galvanizing and organizing tool for charter proponents, as it aims to provide legitimacy to the charter movement, while simultaneously coopting Black critiques of the institution of education to advance…
Descriptors: School Choice, Charter Schools, Educational Policy, African American Education