Dian Mawene, Aydin Bal, Dosun Ko, Linda Orie, Elizabeth Schrader, Jahyun Yoo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Racial disproportionality in special education and school discipline remains a persistent social justice issue in the U.S. education system. Drawing from a 4-year-long school-community-university partnership within an Anishinaabe Band of Ojibwe in northern Wisconsin, we propose a theoretical and practical framework called decolonizing agency to address racial disproportionality through systemic transformation. Decolonizing agency transcends the recognition and utilization of others’ support in solving wicked education problems. It requires policy actors to draw from the historical legacies of oppression, racism, and systemic racial violence embedded within everyday schooling routines. It also entails surpassing epistemic ignorance to understand inequity problems, shifting from an individual approach to a systemic one. Lastly, the decolonizing agency demands that policy actors and educators center the epistemology, ontology, and value system of families, communities, and students from historically marginalized backgrounds as the knowledge producers. Informed by data and theory, we suggest six dimensions of decolonizing agency as core principles that educators and policy actors across decision-making levels can adopt to address their unique inequity issues.
特殊教育和学校纪律中的种族不成比例问题仍然是美国教育体系中一个长期存在的社会正义问题。借鉴威斯康辛州北部奥吉布族Anishinaabe Band of Ojibwe长达4年的学校-社区-大学伙伴关系,我们提出了一个名为“非殖民化机构”的理论和实践框架,通过系统转型来解决种族不成比例问题。非殖民化代理超越了承认和利用他人的支持来解决邪恶的教育问题。它要求政策行为者从根植于日常教育程序中的压迫、种族主义和系统性种族暴力的历史遗留问题中汲取教训。它还需要超越认识上的无知来理解不平等问题,从个人的角度转向系统的角度。最后,非殖民化机构要求政策制定者和教育者将家庭、社区和历史边缘化背景的学生作为知识生产者的认识论、本体论和价值体系作为中心。根据数据和理论,我们建议非殖民化机构的六个维度作为决策层面的教育工作者和政策参与者可以采用的核心原则,以解决其独特的不平等问题。
期刊介绍:
Exceptional Children, an official journal of The Council for Exceptional Children, publishes original research and analyses that focus on the education and development of exceptional infants, toddlers, children, youth, and adults. This includes descriptions of research, research reviews, methodological reviews of the literature, data-based position papers, policy analyses, and registered reports. Exceptional Children publishes quantitative, qualitative, and single-subject design studies.