Index

Contextualizing Critical Race Theory on Inclusive Education From a Scholar-Practitioner Perspective

ISBN: 978-1-80455-531-6, eISBN: 978-1-80455-530-9

ISSN: 1479-3636

Publication date: 12 December 2023

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2023), "Index", Lalas, J.W. and Strikwerda, H.L. (Ed.) Contextualizing Critical Race Theory on Inclusive Education From a Scholar-Practitioner Perspective (International Perspectives on Inclusive Education, Vol. 22), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 257-265. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-363620230000022015

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Jose W. Lalas and Heidi Luv Strikwerda. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Abolitionist teaching
, 35–36

Achievement gap
, 20, 114–115

Action
, 216–217

Admissions application process
, 58

Adverse Childhood Experience (ACE)
, 231

Aetas (indigenous group)
, 187

African Americans
, 231–232

adolescents
, 231

challenging experiences of
, 21–23

graduate students
, 26

students
, 21

Allies and cocreators of history
, 212–217

Allyship
, 213, 215–216

American social systems
, 208

American society
, 208

Anti–Blackness
, 37

Antiracist
, 37, 41

Antisubordination
, 66

Asian Americans
, 107

communities
, 90

students
, 90–91

studies
, 100–101

subgroups
, 104

Asian critical theory (AsianCrit)
, 59

tenets of
, 93

theoretical framework
, 91–92, 102

Asianization
, 93, 96

integrating
, 102–103

perpetual/forever foreigner stereotype
, 95–96

stereotype of model minority
, 94–95

Asiatic Barred Zone Act (1917)
, 95–96

Aspirational capital
, 123

Assessment policies
, 39–40

Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD)
, 129

Authentic democratic process
, 201

Autism (AUT)
, 146

Banking system
, 67–68

Behavior support plan (BSP)
, 128

Binary thinking
, 169–170

Bioecological system theory
, 237

Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC)
, 21, 59, 142

Black Lives Matter movement (BLM movement)
, 106, 202–203, 217–218

Black Panther Party (BPP)
, 202–203

Black students
, 38

California Land Act (1851)
, 61–62

California Mission System
, 83

California Professional Standards for Education Leaders (CPSELs)
, 154–155

Censorship
, 196–197

Center for American Progress (CAP)
, 209–210

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
, 211

Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)
, 95–96

Chinese immigrants
, 96

Civil Rights Act (1964)
, 64–65, 113–114

Civil Rights Movement
, 98–99, 106

Classism
, 106

Classroom dynamics
, 85–87

College Board Advocacy and Policy Center
, 22

Colonization, TribalCrit and interpreting
, 83–85

Color blind approaches
, 242–243

Community

critical pedagogy
, 67–68

cultural wealth
, 68, 123

practitioners
, 70

praxis, maletas, and community cultural wealth
, 68

relationships and
, 66, 69–73

rupture of ancestral connection to indigenous onto-epistemologies
, 66–67

Congress on Racial Equality (CORE)
, 202–203

Contrastive analysis
, 47

Control Funding Formula (CA)
, 37

Convergence theory
, 234, 236

Counseling

theoretical issues in counseling pedagogy
, 224–226

traditional view of
, 224–225

Counselor education
, 236–238

critical pedagogy in
, 225–226

critical race perspective on human development
, 244

critical race theory as framework for
, 226–241

pedagogy
, 243–246

recommendations
, 241–246

theoretical issues in counseling pedagogy
, 224–226

traditional view of counseling
, 224–225

whiteness and
, 239–241

Counter storytelling
, 80

Counter-story
, 25–26

power of
, 233–238

Counter-storytelling
, 25

Counternarratives to nonindigenous narratives
, 188–189

COVID-19 pandemic
, 90

Crenshaw’s concept of intersectionality
, 211–212

Critical consciousness of educators, identity inclusion as way to increase
, 61–62

Critical legal studies (CLS)
, 59

Critical pedagogy
, 67–68, 169

in counselor education
, 225–226

Critical race counter-story framework
, 234

Critical race perspective on human development
, 244

Critical race theoretical framework
, 170–171

Critical race theory (CRT)
, 1, 9, 11, 21, 34, 36, 56, 63–64, 80, 122, 133–134, 142, 169, 180, 182, 185, 197, 199, 224, 227–228, 240–242, 253, 255–256

activists and scholars
, 181–182

brief historical outlook of
, 59–61

challenging experiences of African American students
, 21–23

defending
, 182–183

as disruption tool
, 41–42

feminism and social justice
, 240–241

foundation of CRT and tenets for inclusion
, 34

as framework for counselor education
, 226–241

implications
, 29

interest convergence theory
, 234–236

intersectionality theory and counselor education
, 236–238

in our current reality
, 35–37

participants
, 26

permanence of racism
, 227–229

power of counterstories
, 233–238

racism and mental health
, 229–233

results
, 26

scholars
, 188

seminal early reads on
, 73–74

study
, 25–26

as theoretical framework
, 23–25

whiteness and counselor education
, 239–241

whiteness as property
, 238–241

Critical scrutiny of labeling practices
, 64

Criticality
, 39

Cultural identities
, 46

Cultural misalignment/outsider
, 147

Cultural racism
, 229

Culturally Relevant and Responsive Education (CRRE)
, 47

Culturally Relevant and Responsive Instruction (CRRI)
, 35–36, 45–46, 51

history of
, 42–45

learning and instruction taught from deficit lens instead of
, 40–41

Culturally Relevant Pedagogy (CRP)
, 35, 43

Culturally responsive teaching
, 35, 44–45

Culturally responsive/sustaining practices
, 133

Culture wars redux

CRT
, 197–199

light in dark places
, 203–204

schooling in authoritarian states
, 195–197

schools in democratic society
, 199–203

Curriculum
, 39

Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)
, 96–97

Deficit theory of schooling
, 68

Democratic society, schools in
, 199–203

Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAMer Act)
, 96–97

Dis/Ability Critical Race Studies (DisCrit)
, 119–120, 133–134

as advocate for DisCrit lens in education
, 150–155

application
, 126–132

Dominick
, 129–131

for education
, 142

as education specialist in Title I school
, 144–147

examining our story
, 143

framework
, 119–120

help education
, 155–157

inherent structures of special education
, 144–145

integrating prismatic inquiry and
, 142

Lilyanya
, 127–129

Madison
, 131–132

mistrust
, 147–149

as parent of children in dual immersion Title I school
, 149–150

positionality
, 126–127

research supporting
, 120–126

impact of segregated spaces
, 123–124

impact of singular identity
, 122–123

impact of subjective judgment and labeling
, 120–122

impact of western cultural norms
, 125–126

Disability studies
, 142

Displacement
, 62

Disproportionality
, 115

Diversity
, 143, 145

Doctrine of Black inferiority
, 6

Double-consciousness
, 42

Dumping ground/overrepresentation
, 146–147

Education
, 52

as advocate for DisCrit lens in
, 150–155

DisCrit help
, 155–157

DisCrit lens for
, 142

educator
, 151–152

as educator
, 156

emergence of “traditional program evaluation” in
, 166–167

LatCrit pedagogy as framework supporting
, 70

for leaders
, 156

leaders
, 200–201

public scholarship
, 152–153

specialist
, 144

for students
, 157

system
, 38

Education for All Handicapped Children Act
, 113–114

Education Trust, The
, 210

Educational debt
, 122

Educational inclusion
, 187

Educational justice, commitment to
, 16

Educational process
, 44, 243

Educators
, 70, 87, 91, 142, 151–152, 156, 200–201

CRT and DisCrit
, 133–134

identity inclusion as way to increase critical consciousness of
, 61–62

LatCrit pedagogy as framework supporting
, 70

significance to
, 132–134

Elementary and Secondary Education Act
, 40

Emancipation Proclamation
, 113–114

Engagement
, 80–81, 86–87

English as a second language (ESL)
, 156

English language arts (ELA)
, 20

English language learner (ELL)
, 146–147

Equality
, 187

Equity
, 142, 144, 181–182

commitment
, 16

Ethnic assimilation
, 94–95

Ethnic groups
, 180

Ethnic studies
, 172

evaluation
, 172

in public schools
, 164

Ethnicity
, 188

Eurocentric epistemology
, 82

Evaluations
, 166

practice
, 168

as praxis
, 169

Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)
, 40, 64–65, 114

“Evidence-based” models
, 168

Excelencia in Education
, 57

External evaluation
, 166–167

Familial capital
, 123

Family connection
, 148

Feedback loops
, 173–174

Feedback strategies
, 173–174

Feminism
, 240–241

Feminist pedagogies
, 65

of resistance
, 63, 65, 70, 72

Filipino Americans
, 98

Forever foreigner stereotype
, 95–96

Free and appropriate public education (FAPE)
, 114

Governmental laws
, 211

Grade point average (GPA)
, 38

Grading policies
, 39–40

Grounded Theory
, 234

Harvard Center on the Developing Child, The
, 231

Hegemony
, 143

High referrals to special education
, 39

Homelessness
, 233

Human development, critical race perspective on
, 244

Humanizing praxis, LatCrit as
, 66–67

IDEA law
, 114, 148

Ideal membership
, 125

Identity
, 120

Identity inclusion
, 70–72

displacement
, 62

Latinidad studies
, 62

as way to increase critical consciousness of educators
, 61–62

Immigration Act (1790)
, 95–96

Immigration Act (1924)
, 95–96

Immigration Act (1952)
, 95, 97–98

Immigration Act (1965)
, 95, 97–98

Implicit biases
, 121

In lak’ech concept
, 66–67

Incarceration
, 218

Inclusion
, 185

commitment to
, 16

foundation of CRT and tenets for
, 34

Inclusive education
, 105–106, 191–192

Inclusive educational praxis
, 102, 105–107

Asianization
, 93–96

commitment to social justice
, 101–102

integrating Asianization
, 102–103

integrating commitment to social justice
, 106

integrating intersectionality
, 105

integrating story, theory, and praxis
, 105–106

integrating strategic (anti)essentialism
, 105

integrating transnational context
, 103–104

intersectionality
, 100

(re)constructive history
, 97, 99, 104–105

story, theory, and praxis
, 100

strategic (anti)essentialism
, 99–100

tenets of AsianCrit theoretical framework
, 93

theoretical framework of AsianCrit
, 92–102

transnational context
, 96–97

Inclusive general education curriculum
, 192

Inclusivity
, 49

Incorporate literacy
, 51

Indigenous communities
, 125

Indigenous cultural communities/indigenous peoples (ICCs/IPs)
, 185

Indigenous identity
, 83–84

Indigenous onto-epistemologies, rupture of ancestral connection to
, 66–67

Indigenous organizational structures
, 68

Indigenous peoples (IPs)
, 180, 185, 187, 189

Indigenous Peoples Rights Act (IPRA)
, 185

Indigenous symbols, The
, 67

Individual racism
, 4

Individualized Education Plan (IEP)
, 114, 146–148

Individualized family support plan (IFSP)
, 127–128

Individualized Transition Plan (ITP)
, 114, 128

Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEA)
, 113–114, 117–118

Institutional racism
, 4, 230–231

Instructional strategies
, 50

Intelligence quotient (IQ)
, 121

Intersectionality
, 100, 123, 134, 213, 238

integrating
, 105

theory
, 236–238

Invisible dis/ability
, 126

Justice, equity, diversity, inclusion (JEDI)
, 154

Justice Safety Valve Act
, 218

Kankanaey (indigenous group)
, 188–189

Kapwa
, 66–67

Labeling classification
, 64–65

Language
, 63–64

rights of resistance
, 63, 65, 70, 72

Latinidad studies
, 61–62, 70–72

Latino critical theory (LatCrit)
, 56

brief historical outlook of CRT and LATCRIT
, 59–61

context
, 56

CRT, LatCrit theory, and language
, 63–64

demographic challenges and educational needs of Latinx students
, 56–59

as humanizing praxis
, 66–67

identity inclusion and Latinidad
, 70–72

identity inclusion as way to increase critical consciousness of educators
, 61–62

intersectional approach
, 63

labeling and student classification
, 64–65

language rights and feminist pedagogies of resistance
, 63, 65, 70, 72

pedagogy as framework supporting education and educators
, 70

recommendations for field
, 70–71

relationships and community
, 66, 69–73

resilient resistance and feminist pedagogies
, 65

seminal early reads on CRT
, 73–74

theory
, 63–64

Latinx students

demographic challenges and educational needs of
, 56–59

demographics
, 57–58

education challenges confronting Latinx students
, 58–59

Laws and policies
, 189–190

Leaders
, 156

Leadership
, 149, 154–155

Learning
, 48, 50

and instruction taught from deficit lens of CRRI
, 40–41

process
, 45, 86

Least restrictive environment (LRE)
, 114, 117

Lesson plans
, 84–85

Liberation-based social justice pedagogy
, 243–244

Liberatory pedagogy
, 51

Linguistic capital
, 123

Literacy
, 46–47

Local community-based work for racial justice
, 218

Local Control Accountability Plan (LCAP)
, 40

Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF)
, 40

Maletas
, 68

Manifest Destiny concept
, 84–85

Marginalization
, 211–212

Marshall Project, The
, 211

Marxist theory
, 234–235

Mental health
, 224–225, 229, 233

Microaggressions
, 22

Mistrust
, 147–149

authentic alignment of services
, 148

family connection
, 148

leadership
, 149

leadership
, 154–155

service
, 149–150

successfully building equitable programs
, 148–149

trust
, 148–149

Model minority, stereotype of
, 94–95

Multiculturalism
, 224

Multiple Tiers and Systems of Support (MTSS)
, 50–51, 147

Multisystemic racism
, 230–231

Multisystemic theory
, 243

Narrative story
, 25–26

Narrative therapy
, 234

National Alliance to End Homelessness, The
, 232–233

National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)
, 57, 115

National Center for Health Statistics, The
, 211

National Education Association, The
, 143

National Education Policy Center
, 198

Nation–building
, 80

Native learners
, 83

Native youth
, 82–83

Natural Product Reports (NPR)
, 214–215

Neoliberalism on education
, 153

New York’s Primary Care Development Corporation
, 209

News media
, 90

Non-Native educators
, 82–83

Nonindigenous narratives, counternarratives to
, 188–189

Novel Coronavirus pandemic, The
, 59

Occupy Wall Street (OWS)
, 202–203

Office of Special Education Programs
, 115–116

Opportunity gap
, 114–115, 117

Organizational intimacies navigation
, 169–170

Other health impairment (OHI)
, 146

Outcast phenomenon
, 28–29

Overrepresentation
, 146–147

“Partus sequitur ventrem”
, 7

People’s Response Act (PRA)
, 218

Perpetual foreigner stereotype
, 95–96

Planning process
, 84–85

Pláticas
, 65

Policies not necessarily neutral they fail to end social inequality
, 189–190

Positionality
, 213

honest assessment of
, 213

Positive Behavior and Intervention Supports (PBIS)
, 147

Postsecondary National Policy Institute (PNPI)
, 118–119

Postsecondary transition
, 114

Practical lessons
, 85–87

Praxis
, 67–68

evaluation as
, 169

reconceptualizing program evaluation as
, 168

Prismatic inquiry, integrating
, 142

Private sector policies
, 211

Privilege
, 211–212

Problem-posing education
, 66

Problem-posing methodology
, 49

Professional counseling
, 224–225

Program evaluation
, 166

conventions
, 167

reconceptualizing program evaluation as praxis
, 168

Public education
, 39

Public good conversations
, 202

Public scholarship
, 152–153

Queer theoretical framework
, 170–171

Queer theory
, 169–170

Queering evaluation in practice
, 171–174

Race
, 2–4, 6–8, 34, 62, 181, 185–186, 227–228, 254–255

intersects with variables
, 188

as property
, 6–7

Racial battle fatigue
, 22–23

Racial classification
, 113–114

Racial climate
, 21–22

Racial hierarchy
, 3–4, 7–8

Racial identities key to motivation and engagement, recognition of
, 255–256

Racial justification
, 5

Racial minorities
, 232

Racial oppression
, 226

Racial violence
, 233

Racialization
, 99–100

Racialized system
, 225

Racism
, 3–4, 8–9, 20, 23–24, 106, 123, 170, 181, 208, 212, 228–231, 233

creative things
, 217–219

in higher education
, 29

in manifestations
, 211–212

permanence of
, 227–229

social life
, 186–187

Racist
, 37, 182

policies
, 232–233

(Re)constructive history
, 97–99

integrating
, 104–105

Redlining
, 209

Relevancy
, 86–87

Research
, 153

studies
, 90

Resilient resistance
, 65

Resistance, language rights and feminist pedagogies of
, 63, 65, 70

Resistant capital
, 123

Response to Intervention (RtI)
, 147

Scholar–practitioner approach
, 16

Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT)
, 23

Schooling

in authoritarian states
, 195–197

system
, 49–50

Schools
, 202–203

in democratic society
, 199–203

evaluating school reform
, 167–168

Schott Foundation
, 20–21

Second Amendment
, 8–9

Segregated spaces, impact of
, 123–124

Self-reflection
, 213

Service
, 149–150

Sexism
, 106

Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ)
, 219

Singular identity, impact of
, 122–123

1619 Project
, 198–199

Slavery
, 3–4, 6

Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC)
, 20

Smarter Sentencing Act
, 218

Social capital
, 123

Social dominance paradigm
, 5

Social inequality, laws and policies not necessarily neutral they fail to end
, 189–190

Social justice
, 47–48, 240–241

commitment to
, 101–102, 240–241

Socioculturally centered teaching
, 44

Socioeconomic status (SES)
, 122

Socratic method, The
, 67

Solidarity
, 214

Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
, 215–217

Special education (see also Counselor education)
, 148

cultural misalignment/outsider
, 147

diversity
, 145

dumping ground/overrepresentation
, 146–147

high referrals to
, 39

inherent structures of
, 144–145

preparation
, 144–145

systemic inequity
, 145–147

transitional
, 145

Specific, measurable, action oriented, realistic, and time sensitive (SMART)
, 148

Speech and language impairment (SLI)
, 146

Standardization
, 37–38

Stereotypes
, 26, 28

of model minority
, 94–95

Story, theory, and praxis
, 100

integrating
, 105–106

Strategic (anti)essentialism
, 99–100, 105

integrating
, 105

Structural racism
, 4

Student classification
, 64–65

Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
, 202–203, 216–217

Students
, 157

Students for Democratic Society (SDS)
, 202–203

Systemic inequity
, 145–147

Systemic racism
, 210

impacts of
, 208–211

Teachers
, 147–148, 195, 197

attrition
, 145

candidates
, 104

education programs
, 202–203

educators
, 102–106

Teaching
, 37, 48, 50

methodologies
, 143

“Traditional program evaluation” in education, emergence of
, 166–167

Transformative equity education

assessment and grading policies
, 39–40

CRT as disruption tool
, 41–42

CRT in educational settings
, 37

CRT in our current reality
, 35–37

curriculum
, 39

disciplinary practices
, 38

experience
, 48–49

foundation of CRT and tenets for inclusion
, 34

high referrals to special education
, 39

history of CRRI
, 42–45

hope and healing through CRT and CRRI
, 42

learning and instruction
, 37–38

learning and instruction taught from deficit lens instead of CRRI
, 40–41

low referrals in gifted, honors, and advanced placement courses
, 38

research on purpose of writing
, 47–48

thriving over surviving
, 49–52

wholeness through culturally relevant and responsive instruction
, 45–47

Transitional kindergarten to age 21 programs (TK-21)
, 114

Transnational context
, 96–97

integrating
, 103–104

Tribal Critical Race Theory (TribalCrit)
, 80

classroom dynamics, practical lessons and
, 85–87

historical, cultural, and language backgrounds
, 81–83

and interpreting colonization
, 83–85

Tribal membership
, 83–84

Trust
, 148–149

U.S. Census Bureau
, 57

Ubuntu
, 66–67

UN General Assembly (1966)
, 203

Universal design for learning (UDL)
, 123

US justice system
, 231

Veterans Affairs (VA)
, 209

Virginia criminal law
, 7–8

Western cultural norms, impact of
, 125–126

Western industrial model of schooling
, 67–68

Western schooling
, 82–83

White Racial Identity (WRI)
, 239

Whiteness
, 37, 181

and counselor education
, 239–241

critical consciousness of structures of
, 169

as property
, 3–4, 6–7, 238, 241

Works Progress Administration (WPA)
, 203

Yellow Peril
, 95–96

Zero tolerance policies
, 38

Prelims
Chapter 1 Introduction: Race, Racism, and Critical Race Theory
Chapter 2 Critical Race Theory Lens: Revealing the Outcast Phenomenon Experience Through the Voices of African American Graduate Students
Chapter 3 Transformative Equity Education: Using CRT Framework for Meaningful, Liberatory, and Practical Solutions
Chapter 4 Contextualizing Latino Critical Race Theory (LatCrit) in Education: Addressing Challenges to Transform Educators
Chapter 5 TribalCrit: Infusing a Critical View of History, Culture, and Language in Lesson Planning as a Tool of Inclusion
Chapter 6 Toward an Inclusive Educational Praxis in Teacher Education Through an AsianCrit Conceptual Framework
Chapter 7 Special Education Services and CRT: Dismantling the Singular Identity and Honoring Intersectionality
Chapter 8 Contextualizing Critical Race Theory Through a DisCrit Lens: A Prismatic Examination of Teaching and Dis/Ability
Chapter 9 Queering Program Evaluation (QueerCrit): Practical Applications of Critical Race and Queer Theories to Support Equity Reforms in Education
Chapter 10 Indigenous Peoples in the Philippines Through the Lens of CRT: An Imperative for Inclusive Organic Education
Chapter 11 The Culture Wars Redux: Responding to Attacks on Critical Race Theory (CRT)
Chapter 12 Systemic Racism, White Supremacy, and the Role of Allies
Chapter 13 Infusing Critical Race Theory Into a Liberation-Based Social Justice Pedagogy in Counselor Education
Chapter 14 Epilogue. CRT Matters: Here, There, and Everywhere
Index