Deck created for Dr. Melguizo's class in the Urban Education Policy PhD program at USC Rossier School of Education at the University of Southern California.
On critical race theory, feminist theory, and intersectionality.
"Critical race theorists view [experiential knowledge] as a strength and draw explicitly on the lived experiences of people of color..." (Solorzano & Yosso, 2002)
Whose stories are privileged in educational contexts?
Define critical race methodology
POC = People of Color COC = Communities of Color SOC = Students of Color
Critical race methodology: theoretically grounded approach to research that:
1. foregrounds race and racism in all aspects of the research process
2. challenges traditional research paradigms, texts, and theories used to explain the experiences of SOC,
3. liberatory/transformative solution to racial, gender, and class subordination,
4. views racialized, gendered, and classed experiences of SOC as sources of strength
5. better understands experiences of SOC through interdisciplinary lens, drawing on ethnic studies, women's studies, sociology, history, humanities, and law
Intercentricity of race and racism w/ other forms of subordination
Challenge to dominant ideology
Commitment to social justice
Centrality of experiential knowledge
Transdisciplinary perspective
1. Layers of subordination must be recognized
2. Dominant ideology = meritocracy, objectivity, colorblindness, race neutrality, and equal opportunity; "Critical race scholars argue that these traditional claims act as a camouflage for the self-interest, power, and privilege of dominant groups in U.S. society". Rejects notions of neutral or objective researcher
3. Social justice research agenda that eliminates oppression and empowers minority groups
4. POC experiential knowledge is legitimate, appropriate and critical; it is a strength. Lived experiences of POC through storytelling, family histories, biographies, scenarios, parables, cuentos, testimonios, chronicles, and narratives. Exposes deficit-informed research and methods that silence and distort experiences POC.
5. Places race and racism in historical and contemporary
All together these point to a methodology that challenges and offers an alternative to normative social science research that masks racism (and wrongly claims neutrality)
Storytelling privileges white middle-class narrative both explicitly and implicitly; "culture cited as leading cause of low SES and educational failure of SOC" (p. 31)
An approach of critical race methodology: Resisting, analyzing, challenging, exposing
Solorzano & Yosso (2002) define counter-story as method of telling the stories of people whose experiences are not often told; rooted in African American, Chicana/o and Native American communities.
3 general forms:
1. Personal stories or narratives
2. Other people's stories or narratives
3. Composite stories or narratives, draw on "data" to examine racialized, sexualized, and classed experiences of POC
How to create counter-stories, one example drawing on theoretical sensitivity (Strauss & Corbin, 1990) and cultural intuition (Delgado, 1998)
1. Find sources of data, such as primary sources including focus groups and interviews using critical lenses of race, gender, and class
2. Search for secondary data analysis in social science, humanity, and legal literature
3. Add own personal and professional experiences related to concepts and ideas
These led to composite characters to tell a story, using dialogue to interact with one another
Differs from fictional storytelling, in that composite characters are grounded in real-life experiences and actual empirical data
Critical race methodology: -uses multiple methods -unconventional and creative
Microagressions defined as: "brief and commonplace daily verbal, behavioral, or environmental indignities, whether intentional or unintentional, that communicate hostile, derogatory, or negative... slights or insults" (Sue et. al., 2007)
RQ's: To what extent do MAs emerge across campuses and classroom types? What types of MAs are delivered in diverse CC classrooms? Who are the perpetrators and who are the victims?
Microagressions: Toxic raindrops Attacking the intelligence and competence of students
conclusions of Suarez-Orozco et al (2015)
Low expectations at community colleges of students of color confirmed by previous research
Implications for applications of MA research to classroom climate research
Future studies should include member checks to triangulate experiences
"As educators, we must reflect upon our statements, create classroom climates that do not foster MAs, and develop strategies for addressing MAs when they occur in the classroom" (p. 158).
"Feminist theories of education examine oppression in educational institutions in terms of gender, clearly linked to other oppressions of class, race, sexuality, and more" (Jackson, 1997).
"Feminist analyses of the state indicate that, regardless of variations, conventional political theories either are gender blind or posit that the main conflicts to be resolved in the political arena are those pertaining to social class..." (Stromquist, 1995)
“Intersectionality is a paradigm for theory and research offering new ways of understanding the complex causality that characterizes social phenomena” (Cole 2009).
Syed 2010 refers to it as a framework, not a theory
"Intersectionality...is most often credited to Crenshaw (1991, 1993) and Collins (2000) in Black Feminist Thought. Since its inception in the early 1990s, intersectionality has been theorized in legal studies, ethnic studies, women’s studies, and feminist literature, as well as in literature in sociology, psychology, education, and political science" (Brunn-Bevel, Davis, & Olive, 2015).
From the Introduction to the book "Intersectionality in Education Research" published in 2015 by Sylus Press
Pritchard, E. (2013). For colored kids who committed suicide, our outrage isn’t enough: Queer youth of color, bullying, and the discursive limits of identity and safety. Harvard Educational Review, 83(2), 320–346.
Pritchard, E. (2013). For colored kids who committed suicide, our outrage isn’t enough: Queer youth of color, bullying, and the discursive limits of identity and safety. Harvard Educational Review, 83(2), 320–346.
Olive, J. L. (2015). Queering the intersectional lens: A conceptual model for the use of queer theory in intersectional research. In J. L. Davis, D.J., Brunn-Bevel, R.J., Olive (Ed.), Intersectionality in Educational Research (pp. 19–30). Stylus Publishing.
Olive, J. L. (2015). Queering the intersectional lens: A conceptual model for the use of queer theory in intersectional research. In J. L. Davis, D.J., Brunn-Bevel, R.J., Olive (Ed.), Intersectionality in Educational Research (pp. 19–30). Stylus Publishing.