A Guided History into Racist Curriculum, Pedagogy, and Policy: Then and Now

J. Bickford, Jeremiah C. Clabough
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Abstract The field of education in America—oft-viewed as a catalyst for change and self-improvement—has a racist history, which is often undiscussed by teachers and likely unknown to students. This article guides high school students to explore how educational texts, tasks, and policies have been products and producers of racist ideas in the past and today. Examining racism in U.S. schooling situates students to better detect the figurative fingerprints of racism’s evolving, oft-hidden hand. The guided inquiry format enables high school U.S. history students to examine primary and secondary sources, contribute to informed dialogue, and participate in civic action. Disciplinary scaffolding directs students to scrutinize historical and modern U.S. curricula, common pedagogy, and educational policy for racist and antiracist ideas. Social studies classrooms are logical spaces to spark students’ scrutiny of educational policy, pedagogy, and curriculum for racist intent or racially disparate results. The article situates high school American history students to apply disciplinary thinking, literacy, and argumentation skills to analyze past and present racism within American schools.
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引导历史进入种族主义课程、教学法和政策:过去和现在
美国的教育领域常常被视为变革和自我提升的催化剂,但它却有一段种族主义的历史,这段历史往往不被教师讨论,也可能不为学生所知。这篇文章引导高中生探索过去和今天的教育文本、任务和政策是如何成为种族主义思想的产品和生产者的。考察美国学校教育中的种族主义,可以让学生更好地发现种族主义不断演变的、经常隐藏的手的形象指纹。这种引导式探究形式使美国高中历史系学生能够考察一手和一手资料,促进知情对话,并参与公民行动。学科框架指导学生仔细研究种族主义和反种族主义思想的历史和现代美国课程、共同教学法和教育政策。社会研究教室是激发学生审视教育政策、教学法和课程的逻辑空间,以防止种族主义意图或种族差异的结果。这篇文章让美国高中历史学生运用学科思维、读写能力和辩论技巧来分析美国学校中过去和现在的种族主义。
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