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Equity in Higher Education Theory, Policy, and Praxis
A BOOK SERIES FOR EQUITY SCHOLARS & ACTIVISTS Beth Powers-Costello, General Editor Globalization increasingly challenges higher education researchers, administrators, faculty members, and graduate students to address urgent and complex issues of equitable policy design and implementation. This book series provides an inclusive platform for discourse about though not limited to diversity, social justice, administrative accountability, faculty accreditation, student recruitment, admissions, curriculum, pedagogy, online teaching and learning, completion rates, program evaluation, cross-cultural relationship-building, and community leadership at all levels of society. Ten broad themes lay the foundation for this series but potential editors and authors are invited to develop proposals that will broaden and deepen its power to transform higher education: (1) Theoretical books that examine higher education policy implementation, (2) Activist books that explore equity, diversity, and indigenous initiatives, (3) Community-focused books that explore partnerships in higher education, (4) Technological books that examine online programs in higher education, (5) Financial books that focus on the economic challenges of higher education, (6) Comparative books that contrast national perspectives on a common theme, (7) Sector-specific books that examine higher education in the professions, (8) Educator books that explore higher education curriculum and pedagogy, (9) Implementation books for front line higher education administrators, and (10) Historical books that trace changes in higher education theory, policy, and praxis. Expressions of interest for authored or edited books will be considered on a first come basis. A Book Proposal Guideline is available on request. For individual or group inquiries please contact editorial@peterlang.com.
37 publications
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Educational Equity in Community Colleges
ISSN: 2690-4438
This series centers theory and practice in enacting educational equity, and, ultimately, educational justice at the administrative, institutional/programmatic, governance, and pedagogical levels of community colleges and other institutions of higher learning (Woods & Harris, 2016; Nevarez & Wood, 2010). There is a corpus of literature on the pernicious effects of oppressive pedagogy at the K-12 level, especially for traditionally marginalized, minoritized students (Nasir, 2011; Delpit, 2012; Leonardo, 2010). However, this is not the case at the community college level even though these same traditionally marginalized, minoritized students overwhelming start their college careers in two-year community colleges. Frankly, though there are many valuable contributions to community college education, overall there is a dearth of literature on critical, justice-centered pedagogy, theory and practice (i.e., praxis) within community college administration, governance, programming, and pedagogy. Community college practitioners are interested in enacting educational equity. However, there is little community college-specific literature for them to use to reimagine and, ultimately, reconstruct their administrative, programmatic, and pedagogical practices so that these institutionalized practices become commensurate with educational equity and justice (Tuck & Yang, 2018). Therefore, the goal of this series is to blend the work of university researchers and community college practitioners to illuminate best practices in achieving educational equity and justice via a critical-reality pedagogical framework (Giroux, 2004; Emdin, 2017; Sims, 2018). This series aims to highlight work that illuminates both the successes and struggles in developing institutionalized practices that positively impact poor ethno-racially minoritized students of color. Therefore, we will be looking at pedagogies, policies, and practices that are intentionally developed, curated and sustained by committed educators, administrators, and staff at their respective college campuses that work to ensure just learning conditions for all students.
4 publications
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Equity and Information Communication Technology (ICT) in Education
with Lyn Courtney, Carolyn Timms, and Jane Buschkens©2009 Textbook -
Higher Education Challenges for Migrant and Refugee Students in a Global World
©2019 Edited Collection -
Adoption Matters
Teacher Educators Share Their Stories and Strategies for Adoption-Inclusive Curriculum and Pedagogy©2018 Monographs -
RIP Jim Crow
Fighting Racism through Higher Education Policy, Curriculum, and Cultural Interventions©2016 Textbook -
Student Involvement & Academic Outcomes
Implications for Diverse College Student Populations©2015 Textbook -
Getting College Ready
Latin@ Student Experiences of Race, Access, and Belonging at Predominantly White Universities©2015 Textbook -
Confronting Antisemitism on Campus
©2023 Textbook -
The Education Doctorate (Ed.D.)
Issues of Access, Diversity, Social Justice, and Community Leadership©2015 Textbook -
The Black Feminist Coup
Black Women’s Lived Experiences in White Supremacist Feminist Academic Spaces©2024 Textbook -
Toward Abolishing White Supremacy on Campus
©2023 Textbook -
A Guide to LGBTQ+ Inclusion on Campus, Post-PULSE
©2017 Textbook -
God, Guns, Capitalism, and Hypermasculinity
Commentaries on the Culture of Firearms in the United States©2021 Textbook