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Neighborhoods’s Names Created in Dourados (MS) between 2008-2018
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In: Signum: Estudos da Linguagem, Vol 23, Iss 3, Pp 43-58 (2020) (2020)
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Turning Dissertations into Books: Works-in-Progress
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In: Curriculum Studies Summer Collaborative (2019)
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Immigration, ethnicity, and neighborhood violence: considering both concentration and diversity effects
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Turning Dissertations into Books
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In: Curriculum Studies Summer Collaborative (2018)
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Research on Counternarratives of Curriculum in Schools, Neighborhoods, and Communities in the US South
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In: Georgia Educational Research Association Conference (2018)
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Utilization of Language Services for Clients with Limited English Proficiency Protocols
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Turning Dissertations into Books: Works-in-Progress
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In: Curriculum Studies Summer Collaborative (2016)
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Counternarratives of Curriculum in Schools, Neighborhoods, and Communities in the South
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In: Curriculum Studies Summer Collaborative (2016)
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Student interview for Place-Based WAC/WID writing instruction in Urban and Regional Planning, clip 15 of 15
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My Neighbor the Barbarian: Immigrant Neighborhoods in Classical Athens, Imperial Rome, and Tang Chang'an
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In: Abrecht, Ryan R.(2014). My Neighbor the Barbarian: Immigrant Neighborhoods in Classical Athens, Imperial Rome, and Tang Chang'an. 0035: History. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2d26c4tg (2014)
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Thinking About Power and Schooling Through Educational Theorists
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He, Ming Fang; Schubert, William H.; Baszile, Denise Taliaferro; Nuñez, Isabel; Helfenbein, Robert J.; Janis, Sonia; Allen, Michelle M.; Baugh, Michael A.; Brannen, Ivy Y.; Darrisaw, Tomekia S.; Freeman, Nicoleta C.; Howard, Christy M.; Martinaitis, Sandra; Moss, Nicole P.; Stassie, Jill L.; Whipple, Dawn C.
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In: Curriculum Studies Summer Collaborative (2014)
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Abstract:
Multiethnic practitioner researchers explore issues of power and schooling in relation to curriculum studies in the South. We discuss how the articulation and examination of issues of power and schooling are illuminated in the eleven key texts of prominent educational thinkers (e.g., Bell, 1992; Foucault, 1977; Freire, 1970/1992; Kozol, 1992; Nussbaum, 2010; Palmer, 1998; Saïd, 1994; Schubert, 2009; Takaki, 1993; Watkins, 2011; Zinn, 1980/2003). We particularly explore how the eleven educational thinkers cultivate critical consciousness through counternarratives to explore issues of power and schooling such as race, gender, class, power, and place to contest the official or metanarrative that often portrays disenfranchised individuals and groups as deficient and inferior. The counternarratives in the eleven key texts help tell silenced and neglected stories of repressions, suppressions, and subjugations that challenge stereotypes of Southern women, Blacks, and other disenfranchised individuals and groups and encourage examination of the forces of slavery, racism, sexism, classism, religious repression, and other forms of oppression on the life curriculum in schools, neighborhoods, and communities in the South.There are six specific purposes to the session. One purpose is to understand multiple theories of power. A second purpose is to engage in power analyses and critiques of pedagogical practices. The third purpose is to engage in power analyses and critiques of institutions in contemporary schooling. The fourth purpose is to engage in power analyses and critiques of policies and contexts in contemporary schooling. The fifth purpose is to explore the contradictions and complexities of competing theories of power.
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Keyword:
And communities in the South; and Multicultural Education; And place; Bilingual; Class; Counternarratives; Critical consciousness; Curriculum and Instruction; Curriculum and Social Inquiry; Curriculum studies in the South; Education; Educational thinkers; Forms of oppression; Gender; Higher Education and Teaching; Multilingual; Neighborhoods; Power; Race; Schooling; The life curriculum in schools
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URL: https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/cssc/2014/2014/16
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Counternarratives of Curriculum in Schools, Neighborhoods, and Communities in the South
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In: Curriculum Studies Summer Collaborative (2014)
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The Nature of Phonetic Disassociation from Lexical Neighbors
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The Nature of Phonetic Disassociation from Lexical Neighbors
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In: Lefkowitz, Lee Michael. (2013). The Nature of Phonetic Disassociation from Lexical Neighbors. UCLA: Linguistics 0510. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1f59k0rf (2013)
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The Nature of Phonetic Disassociation from Lexical Neighbors
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A neighbourhood through the viewfinder: an autodriven photo-elicitation of a housing estate undergoing renewal
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Interfaces da vida loka: Um estudo sobre jovens, tráfico de drogas e violência em São Paulo ; Interfaces loka of life: a study on young drug trafficking and violence in Sao Paulo
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Testing the protracted lexical restructuring hypothesis: The effects of position and acoustic-phonetic clarity on sensitivity to mispronunciations in children and adults
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Communicative performances of social identity in an Algerian-French neighborhood in Paris
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