The SAGE Handbook of Critical Pedagogies 2020
DOI: 10.4135/9781526486455.n81
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‘More than an Educator but a Political Figure': Leveraging the Overlapping Intersections of Disability Studies and Critical Pedagogy in Teacher Education

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Cited by 4 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…For me, a CPP for science teacher education has meant seeking out pockets of resistance. What has sustained me in this difficult and often disheartening work, despite feeling frustrated by the enormity of the systemic challenges we face in schooling and teacher education, has been building coalitions, such as the aforementioned ESJ committee, and helping establish the Science Educators for Equity, Diversity, and Social Justice research organization-in essence, always "thinking like a movement" (Bharath, 2018) with other teacher educators, academics, and community members teachers (Tolbert et al, 2019). These coalitions were fueled initially by a sense of alienation, of being a lone wolf, but I have since come to realize that that feeling of being a lone wolf can be an impetus for transformative change (Tolbert et al, 2022).…”
Section: Critical Autoethnographymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For me, a CPP for science teacher education has meant seeking out pockets of resistance. What has sustained me in this difficult and often disheartening work, despite feeling frustrated by the enormity of the systemic challenges we face in schooling and teacher education, has been building coalitions, such as the aforementioned ESJ committee, and helping establish the Science Educators for Equity, Diversity, and Social Justice research organization-in essence, always "thinking like a movement" (Bharath, 2018) with other teacher educators, academics, and community members teachers (Tolbert et al, 2019). These coalitions were fueled initially by a sense of alienation, of being a lone wolf, but I have since come to realize that that feeling of being a lone wolf can be an impetus for transformative change (Tolbert et al, 2022).…”
Section: Critical Autoethnographymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our primary focus in this manuscript has been on racialization and racism, as these were central to our experiences as teacher educators and identified as key themes across our autoethnographic reflections. However, we view CPP as a framework that can support transformative reflection and action along multiple and intersecting issues of oppression and marginalization, such as able‐ism (Boda, 2020), or heteronormativity (Davies & Neustifter, 2023). Drawing from our own autoethnographies as science teacher educators, we have sought to make explicit the way that a CPP framework (and mindset) supports a more reflexive and transformative engagement with the notion of the “I” in identity research.…”
Section: Conclusion and Recommendationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using methodologies such as counter stories to uncover the experiences of multiply marginalized teachers (Kulkarni 2022) can shift or recentre knowledge in the field of teacher education. Moreover, racially just methodologies in educational research must simultaneously centre multiply marginalized teachers', youths', and community members' voices with and without disabilities to reduce the distances between research and classroom practices that sustain cultures of exclusion by design through hegemony (Boda 2020). This is increasingly important with indigenous populations whose framing of disability disobeys the epistemic centre of categorization prominently centred in the Western white (post-)Modern world (Velarde 2018).…”
Section: Implications and Conclusive Remarks: From 'What Is' To 'What...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, in other work I have done [25][26][27], I do not use the term intersectionality to critically theorize how differential positioning of specific identities are made subject to discrimination and educational neglect, such as disabled students and multiply marginalized youth labeled with disabilities, but I do point out is that there is a need to interrogate how overlapping identities are developed as 'less-than' through a rhetorical process and set of material realities that deny agency and visibilization of students' experiences. Not using the term intersectionality, though, does not make these analyses any less intersectional, as Cho et al [18] remind me.…”
Section: Intersectionality Is a Critical Social Theory And Not Primar...mentioning
confidence: 99%