Description

Book Synopsis

A powerful book comprising stories of anti-racist action by higher education scholars including researchers and teachers at various stages of their careers. Aimed at and relevant for anyone in education, it encourages reflection on the tolerance of racist structures and strategies to help enact positive change.

An edited volume, each chapter discusses the author's experiences of racism, including how they became part of anti-racist teaching activism through a growing understanding of the impact of racism in education. Common themes are highlighted throughout so readers can engage with relevant ideas and issues to draw inspiration for their own anti-racist action.

The book draws attention to the idea that while discussion is welcome, it should be a pre-cursor to focused action. It shows exactly how university lecturers, teachers and anyone involved in education can contribute in a meaningful way to the change that is needed. To promote critical thinking, each chapter includes challenging questions and suggested additional readings/resources.



Trade Review

“This book is dripping with hope wrung from struggle, Every chapter and every page tells a white story, a black story and then a story, more universal despite all the critical diversity, of change. Even when the odds are stacked. Even when no one is with you. Even when you alone, and black and exposed in the appalling loneliness of leadership each of these scholars of sociology show that there is change if you stay with the trouble and the troubling of self, structure, system and story...

-- Alison Phipps OBE * Professor of Languages and Intercultural Studies, University of Glasgow *

...There is no recipe or gantt chart; no log frame or linear programme that can be deduced from each story in this book. Instead, in a turn from sociology and social science to the beating heart of the humanities there is a conclusion in love, in care, compassion and connection. And it is this that speaks to the authenticity and fluidity of this fraught moment in history and in sociology. The fact that a combination of love and scholarship – not either or but both add – bring us, again, to that earlier decolonial and hopeful moment of the legacy of Paulo Freire: “No matter where the oppressed are found, the act of love is commitment to their cause--the cause of liberation” (Pedagogy of the Oppressed). I commend this book to all students of sociology and as a vision of the storying of futures of care, compassion and connection fiercely grounded in rigour, public telling and intellectual thought”

-- Alison Phipps OBE * Professor of Languages and Intercultural Studies, University of Glasgow *

"This timely book encourages readers to consider their own positionality and ‘narrative’ in relation to anti-racist thinking and learning...a dynamic team of contributors from a wide variety of academic and professional fields... gives a vibrant multi-dimensional lens through which to view the contents of the book. The collected material is both engaging and pertinent and has a specific focus on how to understand and facilitate effective race equity and anti-racist pedagogy...This book supports the reader in gaining insight and a new of way of seeing the world. It interrogates what can be done to address injustice and the systemic causes of racial inequity, thus ensuring a collective responsibility for change within the sector."

-- Dr Susan Davis * Reader in Diversity and Equity in Education, Cardiff Metropolitan University *

Table of Contents

Meet the editors and contributors

Foreword, by Khadija Mohammed

Introduction: Silence is not an option, by Geetha Marcus and Stefanie Van de Peer

Chapter 1: And still I rise, by Geetha Marcus

Chapter 2: Whose knowledge counts in Early Childhood Education and Care, by Caralyn Blaisdell

Chapter 3: Changing worldviews through study visits, by Simon Hoult

Chapter 4: Using critical dialogue to address racism, humanise the 'other' and create solidarity and praxis in the classroom, by Emma Wood

Chapter 5: Decolonisation as public sociology practice, by Eurig Scandrett

Chapter 6: The Scottish Centre for Social Justice, by Marion Ellison

Chapter 7: Challenging dominant narratives about the global south to address implicit bias and othering, by Walid Salhab, Sandra Ndale and Emma Wood

Chapter 8: Film festivals and film studies: an anti-racist approach to curation and education, by Stefanie Van de Peer

Chapter 9: Creative strategies for unknowing: taking risks to encourage equitable relationships in the classroom, by Anthony Schrag

Chapter 10: White is the colour of my name: anti-racism in theatre and performance praxis, by Bianca Mastrominico

Chapter 11: Mad studies and anti-racism, by Anne O’Donnell

Chapter 12: Imagining defragmented university spaces, by Arek Dakessian; Anthony Ataekong; Olutayo Burrows; Misbah Haqani; MD Rezaur Rahman and Georgina Pearson

Chapter 13: Critical conversations on decolonising the physiotherapy curriculum, by Kavi C Jagadamma, Judith Lane and Jane Culpan

Chapter 14: Walking the talk: stepping into difficult conversations in occupational therapy education, by Michelle L Elliot and Zaynab Akhtar

Conclusion: Learning to Love, by Geetha Marcus and Stefanie Van de Peer

Index

Anti-racism in Education: Stories of Growing

    Product form

    £999.99

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    A Paperback / softback by Geetha Marcus, Stefanie Van de Peer

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      View other formats and editions of Anti-racism in Education: Stories of Growing by Geetha Marcus

      Publisher: Critical Publishing Ltd
      Publication Date: 26/05/2023
      ISBN13: 9781915713001, 978-1915713001
      ISBN10: 1915713005

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      A powerful book comprising stories of anti-racist action by higher education scholars including researchers and teachers at various stages of their careers. Aimed at and relevant for anyone in education, it encourages reflection on the tolerance of racist structures and strategies to help enact positive change.

      An edited volume, each chapter discusses the author's experiences of racism, including how they became part of anti-racist teaching activism through a growing understanding of the impact of racism in education. Common themes are highlighted throughout so readers can engage with relevant ideas and issues to draw inspiration for their own anti-racist action.

      The book draws attention to the idea that while discussion is welcome, it should be a pre-cursor to focused action. It shows exactly how university lecturers, teachers and anyone involved in education can contribute in a meaningful way to the change that is needed. To promote critical thinking, each chapter includes challenging questions and suggested additional readings/resources.



      Trade Review

      “This book is dripping with hope wrung from struggle, Every chapter and every page tells a white story, a black story and then a story, more universal despite all the critical diversity, of change. Even when the odds are stacked. Even when no one is with you. Even when you alone, and black and exposed in the appalling loneliness of leadership each of these scholars of sociology show that there is change if you stay with the trouble and the troubling of self, structure, system and story...

      -- Alison Phipps OBE * Professor of Languages and Intercultural Studies, University of Glasgow *

      ...There is no recipe or gantt chart; no log frame or linear programme that can be deduced from each story in this book. Instead, in a turn from sociology and social science to the beating heart of the humanities there is a conclusion in love, in care, compassion and connection. And it is this that speaks to the authenticity and fluidity of this fraught moment in history and in sociology. The fact that a combination of love and scholarship – not either or but both add – bring us, again, to that earlier decolonial and hopeful moment of the legacy of Paulo Freire: “No matter where the oppressed are found, the act of love is commitment to their cause--the cause of liberation” (Pedagogy of the Oppressed). I commend this book to all students of sociology and as a vision of the storying of futures of care, compassion and connection fiercely grounded in rigour, public telling and intellectual thought”

      -- Alison Phipps OBE * Professor of Languages and Intercultural Studies, University of Glasgow *

      "This timely book encourages readers to consider their own positionality and ‘narrative’ in relation to anti-racist thinking and learning...a dynamic team of contributors from a wide variety of academic and professional fields... gives a vibrant multi-dimensional lens through which to view the contents of the book. The collected material is both engaging and pertinent and has a specific focus on how to understand and facilitate effective race equity and anti-racist pedagogy...This book supports the reader in gaining insight and a new of way of seeing the world. It interrogates what can be done to address injustice and the systemic causes of racial inequity, thus ensuring a collective responsibility for change within the sector."

      -- Dr Susan Davis * Reader in Diversity and Equity in Education, Cardiff Metropolitan University *

      Table of Contents

      Meet the editors and contributors

      Foreword, by Khadija Mohammed

      Introduction: Silence is not an option, by Geetha Marcus and Stefanie Van de Peer

      Chapter 1: And still I rise, by Geetha Marcus

      Chapter 2: Whose knowledge counts in Early Childhood Education and Care, by Caralyn Blaisdell

      Chapter 3: Changing worldviews through study visits, by Simon Hoult

      Chapter 4: Using critical dialogue to address racism, humanise the 'other' and create solidarity and praxis in the classroom, by Emma Wood

      Chapter 5: Decolonisation as public sociology practice, by Eurig Scandrett

      Chapter 6: The Scottish Centre for Social Justice, by Marion Ellison

      Chapter 7: Challenging dominant narratives about the global south to address implicit bias and othering, by Walid Salhab, Sandra Ndale and Emma Wood

      Chapter 8: Film festivals and film studies: an anti-racist approach to curation and education, by Stefanie Van de Peer

      Chapter 9: Creative strategies for unknowing: taking risks to encourage equitable relationships in the classroom, by Anthony Schrag

      Chapter 10: White is the colour of my name: anti-racism in theatre and performance praxis, by Bianca Mastrominico

      Chapter 11: Mad studies and anti-racism, by Anne O’Donnell

      Chapter 12: Imagining defragmented university spaces, by Arek Dakessian; Anthony Ataekong; Olutayo Burrows; Misbah Haqani; MD Rezaur Rahman and Georgina Pearson

      Chapter 13: Critical conversations on decolonising the physiotherapy curriculum, by Kavi C Jagadamma, Judith Lane and Jane Culpan

      Chapter 14: Walking the talk: stepping into difficult conversations in occupational therapy education, by Michelle L Elliot and Zaynab Akhtar

      Conclusion: Learning to Love, by Geetha Marcus and Stefanie Van de Peer

      Index

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