de Royston Maxine McKinney, Madkins Tia C, Givens Jarvis R, Nasir Na'ilah Suad
University of Wisconsin-Madison.
The University of Texas at Austin.
Am Educ Res J. 2021 Feb;58(1):68-106. doi: 10.3102/0002831220921119. Epub 2020 May 12.
Many Black educators in the United States demonstrate a political clarity about white supremacy and the racialized harm it cultivates in and out of schools. We highlight the perspectives of some of these educators and ask, (1) How do they articulate the need to protect Black children? and (2) What mechanisms of protection do they enact in their classrooms and schools? Through further elaborating the politicized caring framework, our analyses show how Black educators disrupt the racialized harm produced within schools to instead (re)position Black students as children worthy of protection via caring relationships, alternative discipline policies, and other interpersonal and institutional mechanisms. This study has implications for teaching, teacher education, and how the "work" of teachers is conceptualized and researched.
美国许多黑人教育工作者对白人至上主义及其在学校内外造成的种族化伤害表现出政治上的清醒认识。我们强调其中一些教育工作者的观点,并提出以下问题:(1)他们如何阐述保护黑人儿童的必要性?(2)他们在课堂和学校中采取了哪些保护机制?通过进一步阐述政治化关怀框架,我们的分析表明,黑人教育工作者如何打破学校内部产生的种族化伤害,转而通过关怀关系、替代性纪律政策以及其他人际和制度机制,将黑人学生重新定位为值得保护的儿童。这项研究对教学、教师教育以及如何对教师的“工作”进行概念化和研究具有启示意义。