移动指针:(重新)想象我们孩子的反种族主义教育

IF 0.5 Q4 SOCIOLOGY
Wesam M. Salem, G. Tillis
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引用次数: 1

摘要

新冠肺炎大流行揭示了我们社会中巨大的社会、心理、经济和政治不平等。在对抗系统性压迫和建立正义方面,教育变得比以前更加重要。家长、学生和教育工作者都陷入了混乱,机会和机会都在减少和消散。这篇文章报道了两位母亲之间的批判性对话,她们是教师学者,她们的孩子在公立学校受到了微妙但深刻的他人行为的影响。通过小插曲,我们质疑并(重新)思考那些被视为理所当然的以欧洲为中心的教育方法,这些方法可以说是边缘化了我们的孩子,并暗中掩盖了他们的文化遗产。我们进行自动民族志叙事调查,以捕捉我们作为社会存在者,如何与那些言语和行为影响我们并塑造我们存在的人生活在一起。我们分享了四个关于我们与差异、他人、解雇和疏远的斗争的小插曲:1)“谢谢你的电子邮件”;2) 这需要相当多的时间;3) 我们可以做得更多!;和4)我们的历史,我们的存在,重新演绎。这篇文章提供了上下文的、时间的、局部的和正在形成的叙述。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Moving the Needle: (Re)Imagining Antiracist Education for Our Children
The COVID-19 pandemic has shed light on the vast social-psychological, economic, and political inequities in our society. Education has become even more important than before to counter systemic oppression and institute justice. Parents, students, and educators are thrown into chaos where opportunity and access are diminished and dissipated. This essay reports on critical conversations between two mothers who are teacher-scholars whose children were subjected to the subtle but profound practices of othering in public schools. Using vignettes, we interrogate and (re)think the taken-for-granted Eurocentric approaches to education that arguably marginalized our children and insidiously masked their cultural heritage. We engage in auto-ethnographic narrative inquiry to capture how we, as social beings, live in relation to those whose words and actions impact us and shape our existence. We share four vignettes about our struggles with difference, othering, dismissal, and alienation: 1) “Thank You for Your Email”; 2) It takes quite a bit; 3) We can do more!; and 4) Our History, Our Existence, Redacted. This essay offers narratives that are contextual, temporal, partial, and becoming.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
16.70%
发文量
15
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