Antiracist Education

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This book combines theory, practice, and ethnography in an exploration of how teachers can fully implement diversity and antiracism as a foundation of their teaching approach. Kailin presents her curriculum, which has been influenced by many years of active involvement with parents and teachers in schools, along with ethnographic reports of the processes of change that teachers experience as they fully explore the realities of race relations, its history, and the lived experiences of others. Visit our website for sample chapters!

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Genre : Education
Author : Julie Kailin
Publisher : Rowman & Littlefield
Release : 2002
File : 268 Pages
ISBN-13 : 0742518248


Policy And Practice In Multicultural And Anti Racist Education

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This fascinating case study, first published in 1990, of how policies work out in a real school setting is placed in the context of the wider debate about multi-cultural, anti-racist education. This book also makes suggestions for the shaping of future policy. This book should be of interest to lecturers and students of education and sociology.

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Genre : Education
Author : Peter Foster
Publisher : Routledge
Release : 2019-08-13
File : 274 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781000639483


Learning And Teaching While White Antiracist Strategies For School Communities Equity And Social Justice In Education

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We need to name whiteness, in order to move toward antiracism. For too long, white educators have relied on people of color to make change to a relentlessly racist school system. Racial equity will not come until white educators recognize their role in supporting racist policies and practices, and take responsibility for dismantling them. Learning and Teaching While White is an accessible guide to help white educators, leaders, students, and parents develop an explicit, skills-based antiracist practice. Through their own experiences working with school communities, and the strategies and tools they have developed, Jenna Chandler-Ward and Elizabeth Denevi share how white educators can gain greater consciousness of their own white racial identity; analyze the role of whiteness in their school systems; rethink pedagogical approaches and curricular topics; address the role of white parents in the pursuit of racial literacy and equity; and much more. Their book will empower white educators to be part of creating a more equitable educational system for all students.

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Genre : Education
Author : Jenna Chandler-Ward
Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company
Release : 2022-07-26
File : 225 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781324016755


The Realization Of Anti Racist Teaching

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First published in 1986, The Realization of Anti-Racist Teaching explores the subject and importance of anti-racist education. The book examines the relationship between the educational debate at the level of academic institutions, professional organisations, and local education authorities within the context of the actual practice of teaching. It also questions how to link anti-racist theories put forward by theorists and activists to the practice of teachers. The Realization of Anti-Racist Teaching is a detailed discussion of the history of racism and of anti-racist teaching and education.

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Genre : Education
Author : Godfrey L. Brandt
Publisher : Routledge
Release : 2022-02-14
File : 141 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781000344233


Issues In Holocaust Education

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This original contribution to understanding the nature of Holocaust education in schools tackles an issue that has gained significant interest over the past decade, and is of increasing relevance due to a growing intolerance across Europe and elsewhere. The authors examine a range of issues including the need for Holocaust education, the factors that facilitate or inhibit its evolution, and the indifferent response of the antiracist movement to the attempted annihilation of European Jewry. The empirical content sheds light on the attitudes and practices of teachers and on the prospects of drawing on the Holocaust to further the goal of participatory democracy. The themes and illustrative research are discussed in the context of developments in two locations, the United Kingdom and Canada, and the findings will be germane to an international audience. The volume will prove invaluable to academics and policy makers concerned with social policy, sociology, education and history, as well as to teachers of the Holocaust.

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Genre : History
Author : Geoffrey Short
Publisher : Taylor & Francis
Release : 2017-07-05
File : 166 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781351925884


Antiracist Teacher Education

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In this edited book sponsored by the ATE Diversity Committee, we invited teacher educators to provide their stories from the field of education, related to antiracist instruction in teacher education. The stories took the form of narratives and counternarratives. The engaging ideas, activities, and suggestions throughout provide readers with much content to reflect on and apply in their teacher education classrooms and programs. Education advocates and policy makers would also be interested in hearing the perspectives of these educators, as they bring to light much information that is not clear through just the numbers or quantitative statistics. These in-depth rich descriptions provide high quality information that would be beneficial to educators in various settings and subject areas, as this is an antiracist teacher education is an issue that goes across all areas in education.

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Genre : Education
Author : Gilda Martínez-Alba
Publisher : Rowman & Littlefield
Release : 2022-07-26
File : 141 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781475865738


Critical Multicultural Education

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This volume collects Christine Sleeter’s core work focusing on critical multicultural education, situating culture and identity within an analysis of power and racism. Multicultural education arose in the context of the Civil Rights Movement and, in its inception, shared with that movement a focus on eradicating both interpersonal and systemic racism. The problem this book takes up is that, over time, many people have come to understand and enact multicultural education in ways that evade grappling directly with racism. This dilution has happened for several reasons, including White teachers’ rearticulations of multicultural education as “getting along” or learning to be colorblind and neoliberal reforms that have reduced it to a celebration of cultural diversity while maintaining silence about racism. This volume includes ten of SleeterÕs articles that explicitly locate multicultural education within critical understandings of race, racism, and colonialism, offering both theoretical and practical discussions of what that means. “A deeply researched, contextualized, and nuanced account of multicultural education.” —H. Richard Milner IV, Vanderbilt University “This beautiful and intersectional volume needs to be required reading in every school of education.” —Robin DiAngelo, coauthor of Is Everyone Really Equal? “This book is an important intervention on the side of racial justice in education” —Wayne Au, editor, Rethinking Schools

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Genre : Education
Author : Christine E. Sleeter
Publisher : Teachers College Press
Release : 2024
File : 193 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9780807782682


The Antiracist Roadmap To Educational Equity

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"Two award-winning school leaders of color leaders lay out what teachers, principals, superintendents, central office staff, and community members can do to make U.S. schools more equitable in both policy and practice"--

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Genre : Education
Author : Avis Williams
Publisher : ASCD
Release : 2023
File : 146 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781416632566


Shattering The Denial

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This book has gone to great lengths to reveal, through research and practice, the possibilities of addressing and reducing racist practices in our schools. It features an Antiracist Education Teacher Study that assisted in providing baseline figures of teacher perceptions of racism, and demonstrated how teachers can successfully implement antiracist concepts in their classrooms. Findings further indicate that such teacher involvement makes a difference in student acceptance and attitude. As teachers display enthusiasm for teaching their subject areas multiculturally, and having an intolerance for racist behavior, many students have shown greater respect and appreciation for their teachers who are willing to expose life's realities. Educators in the Teacher Study became role models for their students. This role modeling empowered students in positive ways to address issues of racism from the student perspective. Dr. Donaldson also focuses on shattering the denial of teachers who doubt the existence of racism in schools and who question how student learning is adversely affected by racism. She uncovers the difficulty teachers have with coming to grips with the realities of racism. In light of these difficulties, those who endured became empowered to become better teachers.

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Genre : Education
Author : Karen B. Donaldson
Publisher : Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Release : 2001-05-30
File : 206 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9780313074042


Resources In Education

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Product Details :

Genre : Education
Author :
Publisher :
Release : 2001
File : 748 Pages
ISBN-13 : CUB:U183034913764