Abstract

Spring 2021, undergraduate students across the country were entering their second year of obligatory online learning. This moment in time correlated with an increased attention to the Black Lives Matter movement by white youth and the mainstream public. This study, guided by a team of teacher educators committed to realizing racial justice in Secondary literacy education, designed and examined the impact of humanizing racial literacies curriculum taught through forced on learning on undergraduate pre-service teacher’s perspectives about anti-racist curriculum design. This study builds upon a growing body of research on realizing humanizing racial literacies in teacher education pedagogy. The curriculum sought to deconstruct binary racial orientations prevalent among the dominant teaching population in the United States attending a PWI. Class activities included: interrogating white supremacy, colonization, police brutality and violence through strategic text selection and humanizing pedagogical methods. Predominantly white pre-service teachers partnered with predominantly BIPOC high school students through online interactions to discuss themes related to racism, homophobia, sexism, and decolonialism. We used Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) as our primary analytical framework for interpreting student discourse emergent across the data sources. Findings show how students navigated obstacles related to deconstructing their beliefs about the role of social media and student capacity for engaging critical literacies. And we highlight how pre-service teachers achieved pedagogical paradigm shifts related to these obstacles. Ultimately, through an intentionally redesigned class, teacher education candidates reflected on their learning related to realizing humanizing racial literacies over the course of the Spring 2021 academic semester.

Full Text
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