Moving the Field Forward in Addressing Educator Biases Related to Intersectional Oppressions Through Mindfulness Training

IF 2.1 4区 心理学 Q1 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Lindsay E. Romano
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Disparities in school discipline based on student race and disability status remain a major barrier to achieving educational equity. In addition to systemic factors, research suggests that educators’ racial and labeling biases may also be partially responsible for exacerbating these inequities. This article presents a novel mindfulness-based training approach to address bias as it manifests in school discipline at the intersection of race and disability status. Grounded in psychological research on dual process theory, the paper reviews the mental mechanisms responsible for biased thinking in the context of school discipline for multiply-marginalized youth. Mindfulness-based interventions are explored as one approach to reducing the effects of educators’ biases on discipline decisions for students experiencing multiple marginalizations at the intersection of race and disability status. Review of initial evidence pointing to the efficacy of this approach is discussed, suggesting that mindfulness-based training may reduce the effects of bias in schools. Implications for research and practice are then shared, including recommendations for implementing mindfulness-based interventions to advance equity by centering multiply-marginalized youth in schools.
通过正念训练解决与交叉压迫相关的教育者偏见,推动领域向前发展
基于学生种族和残疾状况的学校纪律差异仍然是实现教育公平的主要障碍。除了系统因素外,研究表明,教育工作者的种族偏见和标签偏见也可能是加剧这些不平等的部分原因。本文提出了一种新颖的基于正念的训练方法来解决偏见,因为它在种族和残疾状况的交叉点体现在学校纪律中。本文以双过程心理学研究为基础,回顾了多重边缘青少年在学校纪律背景下产生偏见思维的心理机制。基于正念的干预是一种减少教育工作者偏见对在种族和残疾状况交叉点经历多重边缘化的学生纪律决策影响的方法。对指向这种方法有效性的初步证据的回顾进行了讨论,表明基于正念的训练可能会减少学校中偏见的影响。然后分享了对研究和实践的影响,包括实施基于正念的干预措施的建议,以学校中多重边缘化的青年为中心,促进公平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: Behavioral Disorders is sent to all members of the Council for Children with Behavioral Disorders (CCBD), a division of the Council for Exceptional Children (CEC). All CCBD members must first be members of CEC.
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