Laurie Grobman, Colleen English, Jessica B. Schocker, Allison R. Altman-Singles, Guadalupe Kasper, Samantha Kavky, Lolita A. Paff, Jayné Park-Martinez, Brett Spencer
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We conclude with an analysis of the challenges faced by these faculty throughout the process, focusing on how this work requires transforming content through a paradigm shift and considering the greater sociopolitical and emotional climate. Despite limitations, we conclude that the initiative has had a significant impact on our college, ensuring that an increasing number of students on our campus encounter antiracist content across the curriculum.Keywords: Antiracismwhite supremacycourse revisioncurriculum Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Additional informationNotes on contributorsLaurie GrobmanLaurie Grobman is a distinguished professor of English and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies at Penn State Berks. She is a social justice educator, regularly facilitating community-engaged scholarship and pedagogy to (re)write local histories of marginalized ethnic, racial, socioeconomic and cultural communities in Berks County and the city of Reading in Pennsylvania. Her article, “‘Engaging Race’: Critical Race Inquiry and Community-Engaged Scholarship,” received the 2018 NCTE Richard C. Ohmann Outstanding Article in College English Award. She has published several books, including the coauthored Major Decisions: College, Career, and the Case for the Humanities (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2020).Colleen EnglishColleen English is an Associate Professor of Kinesiology at Penn State Berks. Her research centers on the philosophical and historical dimensions of sport, specifically focusing on gender in sport.Jessica B. SchockerJessica B. Schocker is an Associate Professor of Social Studies Education and Women’s Studies at Penn State Berks. Her scholarship focuses on issues of race and justice in social studies education. She has published and presented research on methods for and outcomes of teaching about and through the experiences of Black women in American History; teaching about race and racism to our youngest learners; and confronting the Civic Empowerment Gap.Allison R. Altman-SinglesAllison R. Altman-Singles is an Associate Professor of Kinesiology and Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Penn State Berks. Her research focuses on the mechanical consequence of gait and functional movement on bone and the musculoskeletal system.Guadalupe KasperGuadalupe Kasper is Assistant Teaching Professor in Education and has been teaching at Penn State Berks for 20 years. Trained in cultural and linguistic anthropology, Guadalupe teaches general education courses in Sociology and Education. Guadalupe is currently the only faculty of color participating in the AAC. Most of Guadalupe’s classes are explicitly antiracist such as the Sociology of Race, Ethnicity, and Culture. Guadalupe’s experiences in the AAC led her to work with the Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights Educational Initiative. As the campus liaison for this initiative, Guadalupe provides professional learning to local K-12 educators and shares her experiences and expertise in the teaching of difficult content. Guadalupe routinely works alongside other university experts to support K-12 educators from across the state through an inquiry process that enables them to effectively guide students through difficult content and provide opportunities for emotional growth.Samantha KavkySamantha Kavky is an Associate Professor of Art History at Penn State University, Berks campus and a coeditor of the on-line Journal of Surrealism and the Americas. She teaches General Education courses in European and American art history. She has published articles on Max Ernst and Surrealism in Art History, Source, Res—Anthropology and Aesthetics, and The Space Between. Her current projects include an essay on Surrealist landscape for an anthology Surrealism and Ecology (Vernon Press) and her forthcoming book Surrealist Landscape in the American West (Routledge). She is also a coauthor of Art History: A Thematic Approach, Renaissance to the Present, a textbook forthcoming from Cognella.Lolita A. PaffDr. Lolita A. Paff is Associate Professor of Business & Economics at Penn State Berks. Integrating professional experience as a Certified Public Accountant with subsequent training as an economist, she teaches introductory and advanced courses in accounting, business, and economics. Lolita’s pedagogical interests include classroom and online interaction, metacognition, learner-centered instruction, and student motivation. In 2014 she received a MERLOT Classics Award in Business, a peer-reviewed national recognition, for coauthoring an exemplary online learning resource. She serves on the Teaching Professor conference board, College Teaching’s editorial board, and leads faculty development workshops on a variety of topics. Lolita received her BS in Accounting from The College of New Jersey, MBA from Seton Hall University, and Ph.D. in Business and Economics from Lehigh University.Jayné Park-MartinezJayné Park-Martinez is an Assistant Teaching Professor in the Division of Science and the Coordinator of the office of Planning Research & Assessment at Penn State Berks.Brett SpencerBrett Spencer is a reference librarian at the Thun Library at Penn State Berks. 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引用次数: 0
Abstract
AbstractIn the summer of 2020, a group of 16 faculty and staff working at a small, regional public college that is part of a large state-wide university system created a grassroots initiative to normalize the teaching of race, racism, and antiracism across courses in a variety of disciplines. In this article, we provide an overview of the program along with case studies written by four faculty who transformed their courses to center antiracist content. We conclude with an analysis of the challenges faced by these faculty throughout the process, focusing on how this work requires transforming content through a paradigm shift and considering the greater sociopolitical and emotional climate. Despite limitations, we conclude that the initiative has had a significant impact on our college, ensuring that an increasing number of students on our campus encounter antiracist content across the curriculum.Keywords: Antiracismwhite supremacycourse revisioncurriculum Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Additional informationNotes on contributorsLaurie GrobmanLaurie Grobman is a distinguished professor of English and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies at Penn State Berks. She is a social justice educator, regularly facilitating community-engaged scholarship and pedagogy to (re)write local histories of marginalized ethnic, racial, socioeconomic and cultural communities in Berks County and the city of Reading in Pennsylvania. Her article, “‘Engaging Race’: Critical Race Inquiry and Community-Engaged Scholarship,” received the 2018 NCTE Richard C. Ohmann Outstanding Article in College English Award. She has published several books, including the coauthored Major Decisions: College, Career, and the Case for the Humanities (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2020).Colleen EnglishColleen English is an Associate Professor of Kinesiology at Penn State Berks. Her research centers on the philosophical and historical dimensions of sport, specifically focusing on gender in sport.Jessica B. SchockerJessica B. Schocker is an Associate Professor of Social Studies Education and Women’s Studies at Penn State Berks. Her scholarship focuses on issues of race and justice in social studies education. She has published and presented research on methods for and outcomes of teaching about and through the experiences of Black women in American History; teaching about race and racism to our youngest learners; and confronting the Civic Empowerment Gap.Allison R. Altman-SinglesAllison R. Altman-Singles is an Associate Professor of Kinesiology and Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Penn State Berks. Her research focuses on the mechanical consequence of gait and functional movement on bone and the musculoskeletal system.Guadalupe KasperGuadalupe Kasper is Assistant Teaching Professor in Education and has been teaching at Penn State Berks for 20 years. Trained in cultural and linguistic anthropology, Guadalupe teaches general education courses in Sociology and Education. Guadalupe is currently the only faculty of color participating in the AAC. Most of Guadalupe’s classes are explicitly antiracist such as the Sociology of Race, Ethnicity, and Culture. Guadalupe’s experiences in the AAC led her to work with the Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights Educational Initiative. As the campus liaison for this initiative, Guadalupe provides professional learning to local K-12 educators and shares her experiences and expertise in the teaching of difficult content. Guadalupe routinely works alongside other university experts to support K-12 educators from across the state through an inquiry process that enables them to effectively guide students through difficult content and provide opportunities for emotional growth.Samantha KavkySamantha Kavky is an Associate Professor of Art History at Penn State University, Berks campus and a coeditor of the on-line Journal of Surrealism and the Americas. She teaches General Education courses in European and American art history. She has published articles on Max Ernst and Surrealism in Art History, Source, Res—Anthropology and Aesthetics, and The Space Between. Her current projects include an essay on Surrealist landscape for an anthology Surrealism and Ecology (Vernon Press) and her forthcoming book Surrealist Landscape in the American West (Routledge). She is also a coauthor of Art History: A Thematic Approach, Renaissance to the Present, a textbook forthcoming from Cognella.Lolita A. PaffDr. Lolita A. Paff is Associate Professor of Business & Economics at Penn State Berks. Integrating professional experience as a Certified Public Accountant with subsequent training as an economist, she teaches introductory and advanced courses in accounting, business, and economics. Lolita’s pedagogical interests include classroom and online interaction, metacognition, learner-centered instruction, and student motivation. In 2014 she received a MERLOT Classics Award in Business, a peer-reviewed national recognition, for coauthoring an exemplary online learning resource. She serves on the Teaching Professor conference board, College Teaching’s editorial board, and leads faculty development workshops on a variety of topics. Lolita received her BS in Accounting from The College of New Jersey, MBA from Seton Hall University, and Ph.D. in Business and Economics from Lehigh University.Jayné Park-MartinezJayné Park-Martinez is an Assistant Teaching Professor in the Division of Science and the Coordinator of the office of Planning Research & Assessment at Penn State Berks.Brett SpencerBrett Spencer is a reference librarian at the Thun Library at Penn State Berks. He holds a Master of Library and Information Science and a Master of Arts in history from the University of Southern Mississippi.
2014年,她获得了梅洛商业经典奖(MERLOT Classics Award In Business),这是一项同行评议的全国性认可,她与人合作编写了一个堪称典范的在线学习资源。她在教学教授会议委员会、学院教学编辑委员会任职,并就各种主题领导教师发展研讨会。洛丽塔在新泽西学院获得会计学学士学位,在西顿霍尔大学获得工商管理硕士学位,在里海大学获得商业和经济学博士学位。jayn<e:1> Park-Martinez是宾夕法尼亚州立大学博克分校科学系的助理教学教授和规划研究与评估办公室的协调员。布雷特·斯宾塞是宾夕法尼亚州立大学伯克分校图恩图书馆的一名参考馆员。他拥有南密西西比大学的图书馆与信息科学硕士学位和历史文学硕士学位。
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy is dedicated to the study of curriculum theory, educational inquiry, and pedagogical praxis. This leading international journal brings together scholars from a variety of disciplines to explore and critically examine diverse perspective on educational phenomena, from schools and cultural institutions to sites and concerns beyond institutional boundaries. The journal publishes articles that explore historical, philosophical, gendered, queer, racial, ethnic, indigenous, postcolonial, linguistic, autobiographical, aesthetic, theological, and/or international curriculum concerns and issues. The Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy aims to promote emergent scholarship that critiques and extends curriculum questions and education foundations that have relation to practice by embracing a plurality of critical, decolonizing education sciences that inform local struggles in universities, schools, classroom, and communities. This journal provides a platform for critical scholarship that will counter-narrate Eurocratic, whitened, instrumentalized, mainstream education. Submissions should be no more than 9,000 words (excluding references) and should be submitted in APA 6th edition format.