Teaching During Divisive Times: An Exploratory Study of Black Female Teachers in Social Studies

Doctoral Candidate Name: 
Yvonna Hines
Program: 
Curriculum and Instruction
Abstract: 

Social studies education has garnered significant national attention as state governments throughout the country have waged an intentional, political attack against the teaching of Critical Race Theory (CRT) and “divisive concepts” in K-12 public schools. Even though CRT is often conflated with diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives and not actually taught at the elementary or secondary level, since January 2021, over one hundred anti-CRT (or divisive concepts) bills have been introduced in more than thirty different state legislatures throughout the country that would prohibit educators from teaching about concepts rooted in race. For Black women teachers, these legislative restrictions create a teaching context that pressures them to divert from the historical work of their predecessors and go against the grain of Black female identity. As such, this phenomenological study explored how Black female social studies teachers teach about race, racism, and oppression given today’s hostile sociopolitical climate.

Defense Date and Time: 
Monday, April 8, 2024 - 11:00am
Defense Location: 
Zoom - Contact yhines@charlotte.edu for link
Committee Chair's Name: 
Dr. Tina Heafner
Committee Members: 
Dr. Meghan Barnes, Dr. Bettie Ray Butler, Dr. Tracy Rock