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  1. Practice, purpose, and master narrative: Teachers face race and the South in lesson design.Christoph Stutts - 2020 - Journal of Social Studies Research 44 (3):291-305.
    This comparative case study examines the place of white supremacy in teacher lessons on the U.S. South. Multi-day lesson plans and interviews with three teacher participants revealed that open encounters with white supremacist histories were supported by a high degree of professional freedom in their school settings. The teachers held a common commitment to teach about white racism and violence. However, extending these lessons into a more comprehensive confrontation with harmful white supremacist master narratives is complicated by highly varied conceptions (...)
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  • Hard history in hard contexts: Teaching slavery and its legacy in a Neo-Confederate space.Eric D. Moffa - 2022 - Journal of Social Studies Research 46 (4):293-302.
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  • “We need to teach school differently”: Learning to teach social studies for justice.Christopher C. Martell, Rob Martinelle & Jennifer P. Chalmers-Curren - 2022 - Journal of Social Studies Research 46 (4):345-361.
    Using interpretative case study methods, the researchers examined the beliefs and practices of 10 preservice social studies teachers with self-described preferences to teach for justice. While all...
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  • Disrupting narratives of racial progress: Two preservice elementary teachers’ practices.Ryan E. Hughes & Pratigya Marhatta - 2022 - Journal of Social Studies Research 46 (3):185-208.
    This study examined the approaches used by two preservice elementary school teachers as they designed and taught antiracist social studies lessons about civil rights history during a community-based field experience. Using a theoretical framework of racial pedagogical content knowledge (RPCK), we identified three domains of RPCK needed to enact antiracist elementary social studies teaching and analyzed how these domains surfaced during lessons and interviews. Our cross-case analysis revealed that both preservice teachers struggled to balance presenting civil rights events as historically (...)
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