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Interrogating Whiteness and Relinquishing Power: White Faculty's
Commitment to Racial Consciousness in STEM Classrooms is a
collection of narratives that will transform the teaching of any
faculty member who teaches in the STEM system. The book links
issues of inclusion to teacher excellence at all grade levels by
illuminating the critical influence that racial consciousness has
on the behaviors of White faculty in the classroom. It functions as
an analytical tool, scaffolding exemplary examples to inspire
readers to engage in the complex and difficult work of assessing
their own racial consciousness and teacher effectiveness. White
pre-service teachers in STEM education rarely see the importance of
the link between race and the teaching and learning of mathematics,
in part because the White faculty who are teaching these subjects
rarely engage in the study of racial projects in STEM. From this
perspective, the authors of this book contend that the classroom is
a racialized environment that, if not addressed, can reproduce
racial structures and hierarchies in cyclical ways.
Interrogating Whiteness and Relinquishing Power: White Faculty's
Commitment to Racial Consciousness in STEM Classrooms is a
collection of narratives that will transform the teaching of any
faculty member who teaches in the STEM system. The book links
issues of inclusion to teacher excellence at all grade levels by
illuminating the critical influence that racial consciousness has
on the behaviors of White faculty in the classroom. It functions as
an analytical tool, scaffolding exemplary examples to inspire
readers to engage in the complex and difficult work of assessing
their own racial consciousness and teacher effectiveness. White
pre-service teachers in STEM education rarely see the importance of
the link between race and the teaching and learning of mathematics,
in part because the White faculty who are teaching these subjects
rarely engage in the study of racial projects in STEM. From this
perspective, the authors of this book contend that the classroom is
a racialized environment that, if not addressed, can reproduce
racial structures and hierarchies in cyclical ways.
What does it mean to lead while Black in America? How do Black
educators lead for equity to ensure a quality academic experience
for Black children when calls for equality are routinely
discredited in our post-racial context? Through this book, Floyd
Cobb passionately and honestly draws from his personal and
professional experiences to describe his path to accepting the
harsh realities of being an equity-minded Black leader in K-12
schools. Offered through the performance of autoethnography, Cobb
highlights and gives voice to the often-unacknowledged
vulnerability of equity-minded Black leaders who work in suburban
contexts. Using the era of the Obama presidency as the backdrop for
this work, Cobb illuminates the challenges and complexities of
advocating for marginalized children who come from a shared racial
heritage in a society that far too often are reluctant to accept
such efforts. Through Leading While Black, emerging and aspiring
Black leaders will be reminded that they are not alone in their
struggles, but must nonetheless persist if we are to do our part in
making education a better experience for our children.
What does it mean to lead while Black in America? How do Black
educators lead for equity to ensure a quality academic experience
for Black children when calls for equality are routinely
discredited in our post-racial context? Through this book, Floyd
Cobb passionately and honestly draws from his personal and
professional experiences to describe his path to accepting the
harsh realities of being an equity-minded Black leader in K-12
schools. Offered through the performance of autoethnography, Cobb
highlights and gives voice to the often-unacknowledged
vulnerability of equity-minded Black leaders who work in suburban
contexts. Using the era of the Obama presidency as the backdrop for
this work, Cobb illuminates the challenges and complexities of
advocating for marginalized children who come from a shared racial
heritage in a society that far too often are reluctant to accept
such efforts. Through Leading While Black, emerging and aspiring
Black leaders will be reminded that they are not alone in their
struggles, but must nonetheless persist if we are to do our part in
making education a better experience for our children.
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