Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Room
Browse By Unit
Browse By Session Type
Browse By Descriptor
Search Tips
Annual Meeting Housing and Travel
Personal Schedule
Sign In
X (Twitter)
Session Type: Symposium
Presenters in this session employ a cultural studies framework to connect theories of race and racism to the material issues and problems under study. Their goal is to bring theory and empirical data into a meaningful conversation. Discussions are organized around the role of ideology and culture as central aspect of schooling, and around schools as key sites in which dominant representations of racial identity are employed and reinforced. As such, presenters identify the cultural arena of schools as sites where chances of equal educational opportunities for students of color continue to be hindered. Panel members then tackle the question of how we can turn this knowledge into action to improve those chances instead.
Getting Killed by Getting Along: The Strangulation of (Black) Suffering in Elementary Education - Ellen Lin, University of California - Berkeley
Role Models Without Guarantees: The Cultural Politics of Latino Male Teacher Representation - Michael Singh, Berkeley University of California
Linguistic Racialization: How Language Represents Race and Produces Internalized Inferiorities - Maliheh M. Vafai, Santa Clara University
Decolonization of the Safety Discourse in Education: A Shift Toward Spiritual Pedagogies - Gema Cardona, Berkeley University of California