让我的灵魂安息的地方:有色人种博士生群体如何利用以治疗为中心的空间来驾驭高等教育

Genealogy Pub Date : 2024-07-25 DOI:10.3390/genealogy8030097
Jessica I. Ramirez
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摘要

有色人种学生在教育环境中历来面临着显性和隐性形式的歧视和压迫。不幸的是,几十年来,这种情况并没有多大改变,有色人种学生仍在经受着白人至上主义和其他压迫制度的影响。当有色人种学生进入研究生院学习时,他们中的有色人种学生往往更少,这使得这些教育环境变得孤立和充满敌意。这些经历往往包含了白人至上主义的政策、做法和言论,对有色人种学生造成了负面影响。有鉴于此,作为一名曾就读于博士课程的奇卡娜人,我对有色人种博士生如何在以白人为主的院校中,在学术界内外发生的种族创伤和压力下完成他们的课程提出了疑问。本项目的具体问题如下:有色人种博士生以何种方式相互依赖,以帮助他们在高等教育中游刃有余?为了解决这个问题,本项目采用了参与者观察、深度访谈和 pláticas 等方法。我与有色人种博士生群体开展了广泛的社区合作,从这些数据中发现了两个主题,包括(1)休息的社区空间和(2)治愈的地方。本项目最终为各研究领域,尤其是社会工作领域,如何通过以积极应对和挑战白人至上主义以及其他压迫体系的治疗框架为中心,更好地为教育环境中的有色人种博士生提供整体支持提供了信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Place to Rest My Soul: How a Doctoral Student of Color Group Utilized a Healing-Centered Space to Navigate Higher Education
Students of Color have historically faced explicit and implicit forms of discrimination and oppression in educational settings. Unfortunately, not much has changed over the decades as Students of Color continue to experience white supremacy and other systems of oppression. As Students of Color enter graduate school, there are often fewer Students of Color, making these educational settings isolating and hostile. These experiences often encompass white supremacist policies, practices, and remarks that negatively impact Students of Color. With this in mind and as someone who identifies as a Chicana who was once in a doctoral program, I questioned how doctoral Students of Color navigate their programs at a predominantly white institution amidst racial trauma and stress occurring in and out of academia. This project is specifically guided by the following question: In what ways do doctoral Students of Color rely on each other to help navigate higher education? In order to address this, this project utilized participant observations, in-depth interviews, and pláticas. From the extensive community-based and collaborative work I conducted with a doctoral Student of Color group, two themes emerged from the data, which included (1) Community Space of Rest and (2) A Place to Heal. This project ultimately informs how various fields of study, especially social work, can better holistically support doctoral Students of Color in educational settings by centering healing frameworks that actively address and challenge white supremacy, along with other systems of oppression.
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