𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

📁

Rethinking Diversity Frameworks in Higher Education

✍ Scribed by Edna B. Chun, Joe R. Feagin


Publisher
Routledge
Year
2019
Tongue
English
Leaves
249
Series
New Critical Viewpoints on Society Series
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


With the goal of building more inclusive working, learning, and living environments in higher education, this book seeks to reframe understandings of forms of everyday exclusion that affect members of nondominant groups on predominantly white college campuses. The book contextualizes the need for a more robust analysis of persistent patterns of campus inequality by addressing key trends that have reshaped the landscape for diversity, including rapid demographic change, reduced public spending on higher education, and a polarized political climate. Specifically, it offers a critique of contemporary analytical ideas such as micro-aggressions and implicit and unconscious bias and underscores the impact of consequential discriminatory events (or macro-aggressions) and racial and gender-based inequalities (macro-inequities) on members of nondominant groups. The authors draw extensively upon interview studies and qualitative research findings to illustrate the reproduction of social inequality through behavioral and process-based outcomes in the higher education environment. They identify a more powerful systemic framework and conceptual vocabulary that can be used for meaningful change. In addition, the book highlights coping and resistance strategies that have regularly enabled members of nondominant groups to address, deflect, and counteract everyday forms of exclusion. 

The book offers concrete approaches, concepts, and tools that will enable higher education leaders to identify, address, and counteract persistent structural and behavioral barriers to inclusion. As such, it shares a series of practical recommendations that will assist presidents, provosts, executive officers, boards of trustees, faculty, administrators, diversity officers, human resource leaders, diversity taskforces, and researchers as they seek to implement comprehensive strategies that result in sustained diversity change.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Praise
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Foreword by Santa J. Ono
Introduction
Research and Policy Questions We Attempt to Answer
Organization of the Book
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1: Campus Turmoil: The “New Normal” of Racist Speech and Actions
The “Coming White Minority”:
Backdrop of Campus Change
Demographic Change: Contexts and
Consequences
“Colorblindness” and Racial Segregation
Maintaining White Dominance in the Midst of Change
Reactions to Racial Integration: Maintaining White Dominance in Higher Education
Systemic Racism and Systemic Sexism: A Better Conceptual Approach
Conclusion
Chapter 2: Discriminatory Experiences from Academic Frontlines: Limits of Organizational and Legal Redress
Painful Tenure Hurdles for Faculty of Color
More Evaluation Hurdles: Racist and Sexist Framing in Operation
Long-term Impacts on Targets of Discrimination
Active Resistance by Underrepresented Faculty Members
Conclusion
Chapter 3: Questioning “Implicit Bias” and “Microaggressions”: Toward Better Terminology and Concepts
Implicit Racial Bias: The IAT
Rethinking the “Micro” Concepts: An Overview
Beyond Implicit Bias and Microaggressions: Systemic Racism and the White Racial Frame
Questioning the Popularity of Implicit Bias Diversity Training
Conclusion
Chapter 4: Reformulating the Concept of "Microaggressions”: Everyday Discrimination in Academia
The Academic Playbook: Much Discriminatory Decision-Making
Reframing Microaggressions: A Better Conceptual Vocabulary
Conclusion
Chapter 5: Imposed Racial Identities: Another Essential Concept
Naming and Conceptualizing the “Imposed Identity” Process
Identities: Political and Psychological Dynamics of Discrimination
Day-to-Day Realities of Imposed Identity
Identity Issues: Prevalent Asian American Stereotypes
Identity Issues: Negative Latino/a Framing
Imposed Racial Framing: Native Americans
Identifying as Multiracial American
Conclusion
Chapter 6: Resisting and Coping with Everyday Discrimination
Stress and Coping with Everyday Discrimination
Types of Coping Responses
Everyday Discrimination and Career Costs
Proactive Coping Strategies
Conclusion
Chapter 7: Moving Forward: Issues, Strategies, and Recommended Solutions
Accenting a Better Analytical Framework: Systemic Racism and Sexism
Solutions for Two-Tiered Apartheid in Higher Education
Diversity Leadership Strategies
Conclusion
Index


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Challenging the Teaching Excellence Fram
✍ Kate Carruthers Thomas (editor), Amanda French (editor) 📂 Library 📅 2020 🏛 Emerald Publishing 🌐 English

The Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF) s aims, implementation and effect on the English higher education sector remains a controversial and often contested subject. This text offers a stimulating and wide-ranging interdisciplinary discussion of the implications of the TEF on the UK s fast-moving po

Rethinking Reform in Higher Education
✍ Ziauddin Sardar, Jeremy Henzell-Thomas 📂 Library 📅 2017 🏛 International Institute of Islamic Thought 🌐 English

What is wrong with Education today? Why is society in decline? Why does the pursuit of knowledge seem to produce adults who despite their qualifications remain ill-equipped to change the world for the better? What future does humanity face if we cannot find the tools to fix the world we share? One e

Critical Religious Pluralism in Higher E
✍ Jenny L. Small 📂 Library 📅 2020 🏛 Routledge 🌐 English

<p>This text presents a new critical theory addressing religious diversity, Christian religious privilege, and Christian hegemony in the United States. It meets a growing and urgent need in our society―the need to bring together religiously diverse ways of thinking and being in the world, and eventu

Rethinking Teaching in Higher Education:
✍ Alenoush Saroyan, Cheryl Amundsen 📂 Library 📅 2004 🏛 Stylus Publishing 🌐 English

This book is intended for faculty and faculty developers, as well as for deans, chairs, and directors responsible for promoting teaching and learning in higher education. Intentionally non-technical, it engages readers reflectively with a process for developing teaching and details the planning nece

The Educational Turn: Rethinking the Sch
✍ Kathryn Coleman (editor), Dina Uzhegova (editor), Bella Blaher (editor), Sophie 📂 Library 📅 2023 🏛 Springer 🌐 English

<span>This open access book explores how educational researchers working at the edges of innovations in languages and literacies, leadership, assessment, social and cultural transformation, and pedagogies rethink the educational turn in new sites. It engages with the Scholarship of Teaching and Lear

Frameworks for Higher Education in Homel
✍ National Research Council; Policy and Global Affairs; Committee on Educational P 📂 Library 📅 2005 🏛 National Academies Press 🌐 English

This report explores whether there are core pedagogical and skill-based homeland security program needs; examines current and proposed education programs focusing on various aspects of homeland security; comments on the possible parallels between homeland security, area studies, international relati