Teachers do not often have opportunities to openly examine and discuss issues of racism, power, and white privilege. In fact, as Lisa Delpit and other educators have pointed out, these discussions are systematically “silenced” in most educational discourse among teachers. This article explores why it is so difficult to have an open, explicit dialogue about power, privilege, and racism. We examine an instance in which there was a structured effort to hold such a discussion among 60 teachers during a professional development institute. Using discourse analysis and other methods derived from sociolinguistics and qualitative educational research, we focus on two central questions: (1) To what extent were the participants in this session able to...
Classroom teachers draw upon a variety of discourses to understand and make decisions about the stud...
For a variety of reasons, discussions of racial issues in schools are often avoided and many of the ...
For a variety of reasons, discussions of racial issues in schools are often avoided and many of the ...
In this paper, two teacher educators, a Latino man and an Asian American woman, reflect on their exp...
Despite exposure of educational disparities for students of color, as well as the notion that educat...
This article explores the dynamic of the Silenced Dialogue within a graduate-level, teacher preparat...
This article explores the dynamic of the Silenced Dialogue within a graduate-level, teacher preparat...
This qualitative research study draws from James P. Gee's theory of discourse analysis, from critica...
Few studies have examined educators' understandings of racial politics in schools and the larger soc...
This research study invited teachers to participate in an inquiry discussion group in order to disru...
This qualitative research study draws from James P. Gee's theory of discourse analysis, from critica...
Rarely do White, middle-class Americans, the population from which most teachers are dra...
Although racial groupings are not biologically determined, socially constructed racial categorizatio...
Race and racism inform our subjective realities and structure unequal material relations in contempo...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. September 2012. Major: Education, Curriculum and Instruc...
Classroom teachers draw upon a variety of discourses to understand and make decisions about the stud...
For a variety of reasons, discussions of racial issues in schools are often avoided and many of the ...
For a variety of reasons, discussions of racial issues in schools are often avoided and many of the ...
In this paper, two teacher educators, a Latino man and an Asian American woman, reflect on their exp...
Despite exposure of educational disparities for students of color, as well as the notion that educat...
This article explores the dynamic of the Silenced Dialogue within a graduate-level, teacher preparat...
This article explores the dynamic of the Silenced Dialogue within a graduate-level, teacher preparat...
This qualitative research study draws from James P. Gee's theory of discourse analysis, from critica...
Few studies have examined educators' understandings of racial politics in schools and the larger soc...
This research study invited teachers to participate in an inquiry discussion group in order to disru...
This qualitative research study draws from James P. Gee's theory of discourse analysis, from critica...
Rarely do White, middle-class Americans, the population from which most teachers are dra...
Although racial groupings are not biologically determined, socially constructed racial categorizatio...
Race and racism inform our subjective realities and structure unequal material relations in contempo...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. September 2012. Major: Education, Curriculum and Instruc...
Classroom teachers draw upon a variety of discourses to understand and make decisions about the stud...
For a variety of reasons, discussions of racial issues in schools are often avoided and many of the ...
For a variety of reasons, discussions of racial issues in schools are often avoided and many of the ...