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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
181

Teachers' stories on race, racism and race relations in a primary school in KwaZulu-Natal.

Mahes, Ansuyah. January 2012 (has links)
This study explored teachers‟ stories on race, racism and race relations at a primary school in KwaZulu-Natal. Internationally, race is a complex and challenging issue. A qualitative research design was used. The research methodology was narrative inquiry. Data was collected through individual interviews with 6 teachers: 3 females and 3 males. The participants were from three race groups designated as Indian, African and Coloured. The theoretical framing was Critical Race Theory and the theory of oppression. The study revealed the complex ways in which race and race relations play out at one desegregated school despite education legislation and policies that have been promulgated in South Africa to address racism at individual and institutional levels. The study identified key themes: who holds power?; „a monster that lurks in the dark‟; institutional racism at play; teacher emotionality and racism; and strategies of oppression, resistance and coping. A common experience that emerged is the exclusion and marginalisation of minority group teachers by the dominant group, evident in their everyday experiences at the school. Everyday racism is experienced by teachers as repetitive and accumulative, serving to maintain power in the school. The study revealed that the power of the dominant group is embedded in institution through the rules, norms and habits of the school. Institutional racism at the school allows those in power to limit opportunities and information to target groups. Teachers seem powerless in the face of institutional racism. Often oppressive practices reflect the intersection of race, gender, language and religion. This study highlighted that teachers take up multiple subject positions in the face of oppression. The stories of the teachers reflect that their experiences of racism and race relations at the school evoke strong emotions which include anger, hurt, fear, suspicion and vulnerability. This study contributes to the body of literature that has used Critical Race Theory to show how racism and race relations operate in schools. This study points to the need for further research into the de-racialisation of schools in South Africa in their various permutations. Research is needed to examine the complex ways in which teachers live, challenge and conceptualize racism in their individual, unique ways and within their situated contexts. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2012.
182

Set Up For Failure? Understanding Probation Orders and Breaches of Probation for Youth in Conflict with the Law

Pulis, Jessica Elizabeth January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation examines probation for young people in Canada. Ninety percent of all young people sentenced in Canada receive a non-custodial or community sentence, with probation accounting for the majority (91%) of community supervision admissions (Munch, 2012). However, little is actually known about the judicial use of probation, the conditions that are imposed as a part of this sentence and, more importantly, what factors are associated with breaches of probation. Breaches of probation, have historically been and continue to be significant pathways back into the youth justice system, especially incarceration. Using informal social control theory (wider social processes – family, school and peers) and an integrated sites of oppression lens (an analysis of marginalized populations) this research explores the factors that influence the nature and extent of probation sentences and if there is disparity in the use of probation sentences for female and Aboriginal youth. This dissertation reports on a province-wide investigation of a sample of all Ontario youth sentenced to probation (N=6051) in 2005 and 2006, using data from the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services and the Ministry of Children and Youth Services. This research also explores a sub-sample of youth on probation who were charged with breach of probation (N=255) during the period of study. It appears judges use probation conditions as a means to mitigate informal social controls that may cause delinquency (e.g. poor parenting, school failure, delinquent peers). Little support was found for the hypotheses that girls would receive particular conditions (curfews, residence orders, non-association orders) because of gender bias. Girls were more likely to receive shorter sentences of probation, which is interesting given that they are more likely to be given probation for violent offences. An examination into the impact of race on probation sentences revealed the need for further investigation into judicial decision making with non-custodial sentences. Results of the analysis of the breach of probation data indicate that regardless of the commission of a new offence (in addition to a breach or breaches of probation) non-compliance with previous dispositions, like probation, remains a significant pathway back into the youth justice system. Girls, younger youth and Aboriginal youth are all more likely to be charged with breach of probation. Breaching conditions of probation may be unrelated to the original offence (for which the young person received probation) and may be connected to wider concerns about protection and social control. Marginalized youth, in particular, who breach probation, are significantly more likely to be charged by police and receive custody. The aim of this dissertation is to provide a comprehensive understanding of probation and probation violations and broaden the scope of our knowledge of probation. This research adds both empirically and theoretically to the current body of research on youth sentencing in Canada.
183

Reflections on diversity graduate perceptions of campus climate at Dallas Theological Seminary, 1996-2005 /

Roy-Woods, Sabrina M. Lumsden, D. Barry, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of North Texas, May, 2007. / Title from title page display. Includes bibliographical references.
184

Speaking out : class, race, and gender in the writings of Ruth McEnery Stuart, Edith Summers Kelley, and Harriette Simpson Arnow /

Reynolds, Claire E. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Rhode Island, 2008. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 161-168).
185

Nunga rappin talkin the talk, walkin the walk ; young Nunga males and education /

Blanch, Faye Rosas, January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Flinders University, School of Education. / Typescript bound. Includes bibliographical references: (leaves 149-168) Also available online.
186

Reflections on diversity : graduate perceptions of campus climate at Dallas Theological Seminary, 1996-2005 /

Roy-Woods, Sabrina M. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of North Texas, May, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 492-506). Also available in electronic form online.
187

Project Hoʻoponopono : the impact of racism, sexism, homophobia/heterosexism, and colonialism on an adolescent day treatment program student service delivery team (ADTPSSDT) in rural Hawaiʻi

Duke, Thomas Scott. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 869-898).
188

O movimento social negro: da contestação as políticas de ações afirmativas e a implicação para aplicação da Lei Federal 10.639/03 – o caso da Rede Municipal de Ensino de Santa Maria - RS

Silveira, Marta Iris Camargo Messias da January 2009 (has links)
Submitted by Edileide Reis (leyde-landy@hotmail.com) on 2013-05-07T13:15:36Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Marta Silveira.pdf: 1846445 bytes, checksum: ea0917e6a5811456823e1b257ef9cb2a (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Maria Auxiliadora Lopes(silopes@ufba.br) on 2013-06-10T20:02:16Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 Marta Silveira.pdf: 1846445 bytes, checksum: ea0917e6a5811456823e1b257ef9cb2a (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2013-06-10T20:02:16Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Marta Silveira.pdf: 1846445 bytes, checksum: ea0917e6a5811456823e1b257ef9cb2a (MD5) Previous issue date: 2009 / Esta investigação teve como objeto a implantação da Lei Federal 10.639/03 que trata da obrigatoriedade da inclusão nos currículos escolares do ensino de História e Cultura Afro-brasileira e Africana em todos os níveis educacionais, abrangendo os sistemas de ensino públicos e privados. Tomou-se com referência empírica o contexto do sistema educacional do município de Santa Maria-RS, buscando analisar as ações da Secretaria Municipal de Educação para implantação da lei, sua relação com o universo escolar e com o Movimento Social Negro local. Objetivou-se compreender como uma demanda histórica do Movimento Social Negro em favor de uma educação anti-discriminatória, é assimilada pelo estado brasileiro ao ser transformada em lei e impacta concretamente na realidade educacional, tanto no nível de planejamento como na prática concreta do cotidiano escolar. Para tanto, buscou-se tecer uma retrospectiva histórica das lutas do Movimento Social Negro, relacionando-as com as demais lutas sociais de combate as relações capitalistas de produção, possibilitando desnudar como a questão racial assume especificidade diante da questão social e é posta como central pelos novos movimentos sociais que buscam transformações nas relações étnico-raciais, sexuais ou de gênero, em relação ao meio-ambiente ou na redefinição da urbanidade, extrapolando os conflitos capital-trabalho. Avança-se na compreensão de como a educação passa a figurar nas bandeiras de luta do Movimento Social Negro como instrumento de combate ao racismo e reconstrói-se o percurso das ações afirmativas no mundo e no Brasil, contextualizando como este debate tem impactado na sociedade brasileira e sua implicação para a educação desde o nível fundamental até o nível superior. Deste modo, traça-se um quadro referencial, onde os limites e contradições na implantação da Lei Federal 10.639/03 são compreendidos dentro de um processo histórico-social e político-cultural de combate as desigualdades raciais no Brasil. Para análise de dados, utilizou-se a técnica de triangulação de dados, onde considerou-se como base as Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais para a Educação das Relações Étnico-raciais e para o ensino de História e Cultura Afro-brasileira e Africana, relacionando-as com as ações da Secretaria Municipal de Educação de Santa Maria e a percepção das lideranças do Movimento Negro em níveis nacional, estadual e local. Demonstra-se que as ações efetivadas pela Secretaria Municipal foram promovidas pelas organizações do Movimento Social Negro, pelo sistema educacional estadual, e NEAB - UFSM sendo que os docentes demonstram-se despreparados para cumprir as determinações legais e as escolas continuam promovendo espaços com as lideranças negras em períodos do ano significativos como 20 de novembro, sempre acentuando aspectos culturais e sem mudar concretamente as práticas docentes e o cotidiano escolar no sentido de uma educação que promova a Igualdade Racial. / Salvador
189

Anonimos e invisiveis: os alunos negros na Unicamp / Anonymous and invisible: the black students at State University of Campinas (Unicamp)

Souza, Fabiana Mendes de, 1978- 20 December 2006 (has links)
Orientador: Omar Ribeiro Thomaz / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-08T22:50:14Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Souza_FabianaMendesde_M.pdf: 1532483 bytes, checksum: 3073e00cd7c78b8f9ee7e362bae7683c (MD5) Previous issue date: 2006 / Resumo: o presente trabalho é uma tentativa de recuperar as trajetórias escolares de estudantes negros na Universidade Estadual de Campinas - Unicamp. O objetivo central é compreender como a cor da pele interferiu e interfere nas vivências dos entrevistados, sobretudo, nos ambientes escolares, pelos quais estes têm passado. O pressuposto deste trabalho é que essas trajetórias seriam excepcionais, na medida em que estes estudantes negros teriam superado os limites de práticas pedagógicas estigmatizadoras ao ingressarem no sistema superior de ensino, que é reconhecido socialmente como espaço de difícil acesso, pelo seu processo de seleção baseado no conteúdo escolar. Chegando a campo me surpreendi, pois encontrei uma realidade distinta. Havia um grupo de estudantes negros cujas trajetórias de vida não compunham o descrito pela bibliografia. Encontrei jovens estudantes negros cujas histórias de vida não se diferenciavam em quase nada dos outros alunos universitários. Digo quase nada, pois a cor da pele parecia ser sua única diferença. Assim, ao terminar minhas entrevistas tinha um quadro interessante: um grupo de estudantes negros cujas trajetórias sociais eram similares a de outros estudantes já relatado em outros estudos, ou seja, encontrei trajetórias sociais de estudantes negros com menores condições socioeconômicas - o que já era esperado - encontrei, também, no entanto, trajetórias sociais de estudantes negros, cujas condições sociais os aproximavam do estudante universitário padrão: jovens, com pais com alto nível de escolaridade e com renda familiar elevada. Concluo que o estigma da cor da pele nas trajetórias escolares e acadêmicas dos entrevistados se expressa através dos mecanismos de auto-refinamento e silenciamento, provocando invisibilização do preconceito e discriminação racial na escola e na universidade / Abstract: The present study is an attempt of recovering the school trajectories of black students at State University of Campinas - UNICAMP. The main objective is the comprehension of how the skin tone had affected and affects the living of the interviewees, specially, in the school environments where they been through. The presupposition of this work is that the trajectories would be exceptional while these black students, when they reach the university (a competitive place which selection is based on merit), would have gone beyond the boundaries of educational practices that stigmatized them. But when I faced the object, I got surprised because I found a different reality. There was a group of black students which trajectories of life were the opposite of those described by the bibliography I was lied on. I met young black students which lives were very similar to any UNICAMP student's life. I mean very similar, because the skin tone was which make them different. Thus, by the end of the interviews I got an interesting picture: a group of black students which social trajectories were similar to the other students already researched, I mean I found some students of lower social classes - it was expected. But I found aIso black students which social conditions were very coherent to the typical university student: young boys and girls which parents have high schooling and income. I come to a conclusion that the skin tone stigma in school and academic trajectories of the interviewees is expressed through the mechanism of self refinement and silence that turns invisible the racial prejudice in the school and university / Mestrado / Politica, Memoria e Cidade / Mestre em Antropologia Social
190

Underrepresented minority undergraduate students: phenomenological perspectives of successful students and graduates

Augustine, Marva Gail 18 June 2015 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / More than half of the 400,000 freshmen minority students enrolled each year in colleges and universities in the United States fail to graduate within six years and some not at all. Many barriers impact student retention in college, especially for underrepresented undergraduate minority students. Studies in the past have focused on the causes of attrition of underrepresented undergraduate minority students, revealing a significant gap in the research on what leads to their success in higher education. A phenomenological study was used to allow participants to share their experiences from their individual perspectives. This qualitative research study investigated the social psychological attrition barriers encountered by successful undergraduate underrepresented minority students from African American and Latino groups. Exploring the perspective of successful students deepened the understanding of the barriers that minority students face in higher education, how they addressed these barriers, and what helped them to successfully graduate. Through in-depth interviews, this study explored the perceived barriers to student success encountered by successful undergraduate underrepresented minority students in a PWI. Participants' strategies for success was be examined and discussed.

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