作为包容性教学工具的黑人女权主义教育学:黑人女性学者的批判性反思

T. Mbulaheni, Nakia K. Lee-Foon, Falan Bennett, Fiqir Worku, Kimberly M. Bryce
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2019冠状病毒病全球大流行将我们带到了当前的公共卫生和政治时刻,使人们广泛关注社会和卫生不平等,并将黑人社区和其他有色人种社区面临的种族歧视联系起来。大流行还促使定性方法课堂从实体空间过渡到虚拟空间。在这个关键时刻,一个机会出现了,可以放大批判教学法,挑战白人、欧洲中心、异性恋和顺式规范认识论,并将他们的实践引入不断发展的课堂。黑人女权主义教学法植根于黑人女性的政治和知识活动谱系,抓住了她们独特的交叉经历,为教师和学习者提供了一种促进课堂和社会公平的方法。在这次演讲中,我们讨论了黑人女权主义教育学如何支持对塑造教学实践和课堂知识生产的内在权力关系的反思。我们认为黑人女权主义教育学不仅仅是对黑人妇女的教育、对黑人妇女的教育和对黑人妇女的教育。它还提出了基于黑人妇女种族,性别和阶级歧视的历史经验的学习策略,这些策略可以支持包括不同的认识论定位,并有意义地代表边缘化社区的社会和健康不平等。我们肯定,“立场认识论”是黑人女权主义教育学的基础,那些经历过边缘化的人最有资格对其意义和影响提出主张。演讲者从她们作为黑人女性、研究生和博士后学者以及黑人女权主义思想家的认识论立场出发。我们以自己作为学习者和教师的经验知识为中心,反思黑人女权主义教育学的价值。从我们当前的经验中吸取的一个重要教训迫使我们提倡整合一个关键的反思过程。这一过程由教师和学习者进行,以评估知识是如何产生、合法化和/或被抹去的,以对抗构成课堂的社会和制度权力和权威。我们还讨论了对交叉压迫的教学理论和方法方法的考虑,这些方法是黑人妇女经验的基本要素,也是黑人女权主义教育学的基石。交叉方法支持我们评估形成卫生不平等的环环相扣的污名,在本体论和认识论上(重新)定位受其影响的众多边缘化社区,并采用更符合我们经验的理论、方法和实践。交叉性将被用来举例说明作为“旅行理论”的紧张关系及其根植于黑人女权主义教育学的优势。在黑人女权主义思想处于公众意识前沿的时代,我们强调通过白人和父权制的逻辑和教学法来继承这一传统的危险。当我们在当下重新审视“教室”的概念和形态时,重要的是不仅要认识到它是一个智力进步的地方,而且要认识到它是殖民、种族和认知暴力的历史场所。黑人女权主义教育学认为,对种族化社区的经验知识使她们在教授表征其社会现实的本体论和认识论以及用来解释这些现实的方法论方法方面具有独特的地位。为此,明确地纠正学术暴力需要黑人(女权主义)学者在学术机构中有意义的参与和包容,并积极创造一种环境,支持这种教学实践,作为一种伦理和实践,以实现课堂非殖民化和更广泛的定性健康研究。在本次演讲中,我们的目标是将黑人女权主义思想作为一种教学工具,以强调黑人学者对知识生产的智力、经验和文化贡献,并帮助从业者有意义地接近教学,并在(后)COVID-19现实中开展定性健康研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Black feminist pedagogy as a tool for inclusive teaching and learning: critical reflections of Black women scholars
The global COVID-19 pandemic has led us to this current public health and political moment, bringing widespread attention to social and health inequalities and interconnecting racial discrimination faced by Black communities and other communities of colour. The pandemic has also precipitated a transition of the qualitative methodology classroom from physical to virtual spaces. At this juncture, an opportunity has emerged to amplify critical pedagogies challenging White, Eurocentric, hetero- and cis-normative epistemologies and introduce their practice into the ever-evolving classroom. Rooted within a genealogy of Black women’s political and intellectual activism, Black feminist pedagogy captures their unique intersectional experiences and presents a methodology for teachers and learners alike to promote equity in the classroom and our society. In this presentation, we discuss the ways in which Black feminist pedagogy can support reflection on the inherent relations of power shaping the pedagogical practices and knowledge production of/in the classroom. We hold that Black feminist pedagogy is not simply concerned with the instruction of, for, and about Black women. It additionally puts forth learning strategies informed by Black women’s historical experiences of race, gender, and class discrimination that can support the inclusion of diverse epistemological positionings and meaningfully represent the social and health inequities of marginalized communities. We affirm that a ‘standpoint epistemology' is foundational to Black feminist pedagogy and that those who experience marginalization are best positioned to make claims about its meanings and impacts. The presenters draw from their epistemological standpoint as Black women, graduate and postdoctoral scholars, and Black feminist thinkers. We center our own experiential knowledge as learners and teachers to reflect on the value of Black feminist pedagogy. A major learning from our experiences in this current moment has compelled us to advocate for integrating a critical reflexivity process. This process is undertaken by teachers and learners to assess how knowledge is being produced, legitimized and/or erased as a counter to the social and institutional power and authority constituting the classroom. We also discuss considerations for teaching theoretical and methodological approaches to intersecting oppressions as elemental to Black women’s experience and a cornerstone of Black feminist pedagogy. An intersectional approach supports us to take stock of the interlocking stigmas shaping health inequalities, ontologically and epistemologically (re)position the multiply marginalized communities they impact, and take up theories, methods, and practices that better align with our experiences. Intersectionality will be used to exemplify tensions as a ‘travelling theory’ and its strengths when rooted in a Black feminist pedagogy. At a time where Black feminist thought is at the forefront of public consciousness, we emphasize the dangers of taking up this tradition through white and patriarchal logics and pedagogies. As we rework the notion and formations of ‘the classroom’ in this current moment, it is important to not only recognize it as a place of intellectual advancement but also as a historical site of colonial, racial, and epistemic violence. Black feminist pedagogy holds that the experiential knowledge of racialized communities uniquely positions them for the teaching of ontologies and epistemologies characterizing their social realties and the methodological approaches employed to interpret them. To this end, redressing academic violence unequivocally requires the meaningful engagement and inclusion of Black (feminist) scholars in academic institutions and actively creating an environment that supports this pedagogical practice as an ethic and praxis towards decolonizing the classroom and qualitative health research more broadly. In this presentation, we aim to represent Black feminist thinking as a pedagogical tool to emphasize the intellectual, experiential, and cultural contributions of Black scholars to knowledge production and to help practitioners meaningfully approach teaching-learning and conducting qualitative health research in a (post-)COVID-19 reality.
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