第十八届美国教育研究协会布朗教育研究年度讲座仍在爬山:布朗及其后的跨学科思考

Lori D. Patton
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摘要

全国青年桂冠诗人阿曼达-戈尔曼(Amanda Gorman)的诗歌 "我们攀登的山峰"(The Hill We Climb)是 2021 年总统就职典礼上最震撼人心的时刻之一,它启发了第 18 届布朗教育研究年度讲座的核心问题:在美国最高法院对 "布朗诉教育委员会 "一案做出具有里程碑意义的裁决 67 年后,我们为何仍在攀登教育公平之山?本文旨在挑战围绕布朗案的主流叙事,并介绍可能有助于解释普遍缺乏进展的观点--这些观点通常在更广泛的布朗案论述中被忽视或抹杀。帕顿-戴维斯(Patton Davis)受其诗歌启发,对布朗及其在种族主义和白人至上的社会政治背景下的历史和当代含义进行了学术分析,并提出了有力的理解。帕顿-戴维斯思考了一些紧迫的问题:对加剧 COVID-19 流行的环境的研究如何促进对教育中种族不平等和交叉不公正的集体理解?批判性种族视角如何引导教育工作者、政策制定者和研究人员以更进步的方式实现布朗的承诺?教育研究人员中的大多数人都在中学后教育环境中工作,如何才能让他们仿效仍在为布朗案中所设想的种族和教育公平而奋斗的社区的工作,参与到积极行动中来?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Eighteenth Annual AERA Brown Lecture in Education Research Still Climbing the Hill: Intersectional Reflections on Brown and Beyond
National Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman’s poem “The Hill We Climb”—among the most powerful moments of the 2021 presidential inauguration—inspired the central inquiry of the 18th Annual Brown Lecture in Education Research: Why are we still climbing the hill of educational equity 67 years after the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education? The purpose of this article is to challenge dominant narratives surrounding Brown and introduce perspectives that might help account for a general lack of progress—perspectives that typically are overlooked or erased in wider Brown discourses. Inspired by her poem, Patton Davis offers a scholarly analysis and contributes a robust understanding of Brown and its historical and contemporary meanings in the sociopolitical contexts of racism and white supremacy. Patton Davis considers pressing questions: How can study of the circumstances that have intensified the COVID-19 pandemic fuel collective understanding of racial inequities and intersectional injustices in education? How might a critical race lens guide educators, policymakers, and researchers toward a more progressive realization of the promises of Brown? What would it take for education researchers, the majority of whom are situated in postsecondary settings, to engage in activism modeled after the work of communities still fighting for the racial and educational equity envisioned in Brown?
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