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Student Perceptions of DiversitySage, Jennifer M. 10 January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Developing a learning community : exploring the impact of online activities on the building of campus-based communitiesAxe, Josephine January 2009 (has links)
Taking an action research approach, this study explores the experiences of three intakes of undergraduate students who worked in a cohort-based learning environment where team work and classroom participation was expected. This educational setting required students from diverse backgrounds to work closely together on campus during the intense one-year program. To facilitate in the development of a face-to-face learning community, where individual differences could be celebrated and problems could be solved in an open, trusting environment, an online bridging course was developed. Aimed at decreasing the incidence of minority group marginalization and reduce feelings of isolation, the bridging course provided activities directed towards encouraging students to begin to develop an inclusive learning community prior to their arrival on campus. Exploring how online transitional activities had contributed to the development of a face-to-face learning community, as well as perceived disadvantages to that model, key stakeholders' perceptions were obtained through focus groups, interviews, and surveys. Findings include: (a) an enhanced understanding of the ways in which an online course can be used to aid in the development of a learning community for oncampus students; (b) a heightened awareness of challenges faced by those working in a learning community; (c) a systematic approach to the development of learning communities. This research suggests that an online bridging course can be an effective way for on-campus students to start developing a learning community.
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Enacting Feminisms in AcademiaPerumal, Juliet Christine 17 November 2006 (has links)
PhD thesis -
School of Education -
Faculty of Humanities / In an attempt to add the voices of African feminist educators to the narrative field, and to
address the critique that feminist discourses have generally been couched in theoretical
abstraction, this study, which was conducted with five university women educators from various
parts of Southern Africa, explores the enactment of feminist pedagogies in English language
classrooms. The study was guided by the principles of feminist research methodologies, which
advocate sensitivity to the subjective, emotional and biographic factors that shape the
researcher and researched. Drawing from a suite of data sources, which comprised
autobiographical and biographical narratives, lecture observations and interviews the study
explores how the social variables of race, class, gender, politics, religion, etc. have influenced
the participants’ feminist and language identity formation, and by extension how these inform
their teaching of English from a feminist perspective, in terms of What they teach; How they
teach, and Why they teach the curriculum content that they do.
Taking the view that the personal is political and potentially pedagogical, the study
provides a cursory commentary on the participants’ childhood and early adulthood, with the
intention of exploring the potential a retrospective gaze of their identity formation has in terms of
how they frame interpersonal relations with students and colleagues, and the enactment of their
teaching identities. Identifying for more nuanced investigation the study tracks the trajectories of
the participants’ coming to feminist consciousness, with a special focus on their adoption of
project identities which they enact through their theorizing and teaching of English from a
feminist perspective.
Given their subscription and investment in narratives of emancipation that subvert social
injustices and repressive domination, the study explores, at length, the complexities of feminist
teacher identity in relation to the themes of difference, dialogue, and epistemologies of
experience, all of which invariably encompass the overarching theme of feminist teacher
authority. Acknowledging the slippery terrain of teacher and student identity calibrations, the
study differentiates three ways in which authority is generally conceived of in feminist pedagogy,
viz. authority versus nurturance, authority as authorship, and authority as power. In discussing
the authority versus nurturance I argue for unhinging the female teacher from traditional
associations of her with care-giver and intellectualised mammy. Urging for recognition of the
woman teacher as female but non-maternal, I argue for a recontextualised and
reconceptualised understanding of the female teacher – one that foregrounds her capability of
offering critical intellectual nurturance. In exploring the delineation authority as authorship,
which entails the mutual sharing of teacher-student personal experience in relation to broader
public and academic discourses, the study cautions against the potential for personal
epistemology to circulate within the realm of the familiar, narcissistic and sentimental, in the
absence of meaningful critical and contextual pedagogic and educative relevance. In this regard, I suggest the consideration of two pertinent questions: viz. i) is there a shared
assumption that the personal is good and the impersonal bad? and ii) given that other
discourses of the personal are operating in the feminist classroom, exactly which personal are
we referring to when we seek to validate the epistemology of experience? I argue that the
pedagogic and educative worth of both teacher and students’ personal disclosures need to be
subject to critical, analytical, and productive reflection to assess their value as knowledge.
Critiquing enclaves of feminist pedagogical scholarship that suggest divesting the
classroom of teacher authority as a way of rendering it more democratic, the discussion on
authority as power agitates for an unmasking of the inevitable pedagogic and educative
authority that the feminist teacher wields in the classroom. Through empirical evidence it
illustrates variants of teacher authority that operate in the classroom and supports Gore’s
(2002), proposition to develop a theory of pedagogy and power by acknowledging that:
pedagogy is the enactment of power relations between teacher, student and other significant
partners; bodies are the objects of pedagogical power relations, and in pedagogy, different
differences matter; the kind of knowledge produced in pedagogy interacts with the institutional
site and the techniques of power employed there; and pedagogy proceeds via a limited set of
specific techniques of power.
The study concludes with a theoretical and methodological reflective synthesis. The
theoretical synthesis presents the central lines of argument that emerged from the issues
investigated. The methodological reflective synthesis presents the participants’ comments on
the validity of the study and the value that accrued to them by virtue of participating in the study.
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Teaching the Acceptance of Diversity: an Ant-Bias Education Initiative that Empowers Student Leaders to be the Agents of ChangeSmith, Kimberly J. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Elizabeth Twomey / As our world continues to evolve as a global community, schools must prepare students to live, work, and thrive in a diverse society. Teaching the acceptance of diversity to our students is a significant step in building a safe and peaceful culture within our school communities. Teaching the acceptance of diversity to a generation of young people is a significant step in building a peaceful world. This qualitative case study examined an anti-bias education initiative that empowered students to become leaders and activists in their high school. The findings of this study revealed that the diversity education initiative did not have an immediate impact on school culture, but the students who took active leadership roles encountered a transformational experience. The student leaders demonstrated substantial growth in the skills and understandings essential to anti-bias activism. Significant to this development was heightened awareness of discriminatory language and behavior, a more comprehensive view of diversity and its role in community, and the ability to engage peers in dialogue about challenging diversity topics. In a dialogic exploration of individual differences, student leaders discovered the commonality that connects all humanity. This insight led them to affirm individual identity, to conceptualize the richness that diversity adds to community, and ultimately to embrace diversity as fundamental to community. The findings of this study point to the incremental nature of school culture change and the need to institutionalize a diversity education/student leader effort as a long-term initiative in order to achieve substantive school improvement. The findings compel educators to provide leadership opportunities for students, cultivating their ability to become productive citizen-leaders in an increasingly global community. This is the subject matter of their lives, an authentic curriculum that activates their knowledge, their ability, and their responsibility to transform their world (Starratt, 2008). This dissertation captures the lived experiences of a group of students who led this diversity education initiative, and how their reflections inform educational policy, practice, and leadership. / Thesis (EdD) — Boston College, 2009. / Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. / Discipline: Educational Administration.
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Assessing and Improving Student Understanding of Tree-ThinkingKummer, Tyler A. 01 March 2017 (has links)
Evolution is the unifying theory of biology. The importance of understanding evolution by those who study the origins, diversification and diversity life cannot be overstated. Because of its importance, in addition to a scientific study of evolution, many researchers have spent time studying the acceptance and the teaching of evolution. Phylogenetic Systematics is the field of study developed to understand the evolutionary history of organisms, traits, and genes. Tree-thinking is the term by which we identify concepts related to the evolutionary history of organisms. It is vital that those who undertake a study of biology be able to understand and interpret what information these phylogenies are meant to convey. In this project, we evaluated the current impact a traditional study of biology has on the misconceptions students hold by assessing tree-thinking in freshman biology students to those nearing the end of their studies. We found that the impact of studying biology was varied with some misconceptions changing significantly while others persisted. Despite the importance of tree-thinking no appropriately developed concept inventory exists to measure student understanding of these important concepts. We developed a concept inventory capable of filling this important need and provide evidence to support its use among undergraduate students. Finally, we developed and modified activities as well as courses based on best practices to improve teaching and learning of tree-thinking and organismal diversity. We accomplished this by focusing on two key questions. First, how do we best introduce students to tree-thinking and second does tree-thinking as a course theme enhance student understanding of not only tree-thinking but also organismal diversity. We found important evidence suggesting that introducing students to tree-thinking via building evolutionary trees was less successful than introducing the concept via tree interpretation and may have in fact introduced or strengthened a misconception. We also found evidence that infusing tree-thinking into an organismal diversity course not only enhances student understanding of tree-thinking but also helps them better learn organismal diversity.
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Portraits of good intentions: diversity education in the commonplaces as experienced by preservice social studies teachersKauper, Kathryn Michele 01 December 2012 (has links)
Curriculum standards in social studies encourage a curriculum that helps students understand how minority groups and women have historically sought access to equality of opportunity through organization and struggle, as well as a curriculum that supports democratic dialogue and mutual understanding among groups from diverse backgrounds. This study investigated how preservice social studies teachers have experienced efforts to help them understand dimensions of diversity and how these dimensions implicate classroom practices. Their pedagogical intentions were explored using educational criticism and connoisseurship, a humanities-based qualitative methodology that describes, interprets, and evaluates the various dimensions of educational experiences. This investigation followed four preservice social studies teachers and their instructors as they shared their encounters with difference and a diversity education course. Their experiences were rendered as written portraits of their intentions for teaching and learning. These portraits revealed themes of "earnest impotence" and structural obstacles that made truly transformative multicultural education difficult to achieve. Recommendations for curricular enhancements that attend to the "commonplaces" of curriculum are suggested.
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Examining the Ontoepistemological Underpinnings of Diversity Education Found in Interpersonal Communication TextbooksJeffries, Tammy L. 01 January 2013 (has links)
This project examines the ontoepistemological underpinnings of diversity education in the field of communication by focusing on the points where diversity, pedagogy and communication intersect. In this study I seek to understand how we come to know what we know about diversity, or the social construction of differentness, and how we share this information with others. I analyzed three popular interpersonal communication textbooks, examining the patterns revealed in the text, in order to address these questions.
This study uses three complimentary methods to reveal the number of occurrences that center on diversity in the text (content analysis), to interpret themes reflected by the patterns discovered in the text (thematic analysis) and a creative twist on the coding process that opens the analysis process to the coders and includes their input as participants to this study (reflexive content analysis). The results of this study revealed three-hundred ten occurrences of the social construction of difference across all three textbooks but only a portion of those, seventy-six, suggested social constructionist underpinnings of these constructs. This study shows how we have missed an opportunity at the introductory level to expand our student's knowledge of issues in diversity.
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Oppression in Social Work Education: How Do Oppression and Privilege Impact Social Work Educators' Pedagogy?Rudd, Stephanie Ellen 09 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Social work has deep roots in and a commitment to social justice and eliminating and addressing the oppression of people of diverse backgrounds. This commitment is based on the National Association of Social Work 2021 Code of Ethics. In order for social workers to learn how to ethically challenge social injustice with cultural humility, they need to develop a high level of self-awareness, or critical consciousness (Freire, 2003) and commitment to marginalized groups. This makes the role of a social work educator a critical one. Social work educators have their own biases and experiences of oppression and privilege. In order to support and prepare social work students with the skills of self-awareness and cultural humility, the educator must analyze their pedagogy, such as the inclusion of Black, Indigenous, and People of color (BIPOC) authors, the use of open dialogue, and engagement in creating and supporting brave spaces, while accurately describing social work history. Specifically, social work educators need to be aware of their social positioning in which oppression and/or privilege shape their realities, since this impacts their sense of self and teaching practices. This proposal seeks to apply qualitative research methods to investigate whether social work educators' social positioning and the associated privilege or oppressive experiences are important to understand their pedagogical and instructional practices/strategies relative to antiracism.
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Exposed pedagogy: investigating LGBTQ issues in collaboration with preservice teachersConley, Matthew D. 01 August 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Integrating Diverse Perspectives in Graduate Statistics Education Through Academic and Library Faculty CollaborationJones, Christina, Fridmanski, Ethan, Lorah, Julie A 07 December 2024 (has links) (PDF)
Graduate-level statistics education is often narrowly focused on the mathematical aspect of modeling. While this aspect is important, this focus results in a gap in the student’s understanding regarding the context of the development and use of statistical models. This article provides a description and initial evaluation of a program designed to address this gap. Specifically, the authors collaborated to create a reading list related to the topic of social justice in statistics and integrated the resources on this list into a graduate-level statistics class on the topic of multilevel modeling. The article describes this integration, preliminary evaluation, and future steps for the project.
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