Educating Informal Educators on Issues of Race and Inequality: Raising Critical Consciousness, Identifying Challenges, and Implementing Change in a Youth and Community Work Programme
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Clarifying Concepts: Racism and White Privilege
1.2. Recognising Institutional Racism and White Privilege
1.3. Acknowledging Inequalities within Higher Education Institutes
1.4. Informal Education as Transformative Action: Raising Critical Consciousness
1.5. Critical Pedagogy and Critical Reflection as Tools for Change
1.6. Raising Critical Consciousness: A Critical Lens
1.7. Educating for Change: Youth Workers as Informal Educators in HEI Settings
1.8. Creating Learning Environments: Acknowledgment, Reflection, and Action
1.9. Research Aims and Rationale
1.9.1. Demographics of the Researchers
1.9.2. Research Objectives
- Critically reflect on key processes in the Youth and Community Work programme at WGU to identify areas of racial oppression and discrimination
- Critically reflect on the programme team’s and students’ White privilege and its impact on oppression and discrimination in educational practice and processes
- Identify recommendations to improve the educational practice and processes of the Youth and Community Work programme, and the university, to challenge race based oppression and discrimination.
2. Methodology and Method
2.1. Methodology
2.2. Method
2.3. Delimitations
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1—Raising Critical Consciousness on Issues of Race and Inequality
3.2. Theme 2—Challenges Faced When Deconstructing Institutional Racism
3.3. Theme 3—Change: Informal Education as a Tool for Redressing Inequalities in Higher Education
4. Discussion
4.1. Theme 1—Raising Critical Consciousness on Issues of Race and Inequality
4.2. Theme 2—Challenges Faced When Deconstructing Institutional Racism
4.3. Theme 3—Change: Informal Education as Tool for Redressing Inequalities in Higher Education
- Ongoing individual and collective critical reflection on power and privilege within the team to navigate binary thinking about professional identity, education, and social justice
- Implementation of changes to the programme to ensure a commitment to inclusion and equality is upheld; these include changes to recruitment, learning and assessment, and student voice and support
- Ongoing individual and collective critical reflection to explore the challenges this presents, and to identify changes to practice in educating informal educators around issues of race and oppression, and specifically around White privilege.
- Some areas for future development identified by the data analysis include:
- A diverse teaching team of two team members when learning activities and sessions focus race and privilege, to balance the emotional load and address issues of authenticity.
- Consideration of more flexible assignment deadlines determined by the students.
- Increased support for Black, Asian, and Ethnic Minority students who need to navigate increased critical consciousness about racial oppression and the discrimination they face as result of their learning.
- The possibility of an outreach education project in the community with Black, Asian and Ethnic Minority groups.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- What does our account of (insert process) imply about our basic ideals or values, our beliefs about power, our view of ourselves and other people, what we believe about professionalism?
- Are there any gaps or contradictions between what we say we do and what is implied by what we do?
- How do I influence the situation through my presence, my actions, my preconceptions or assumptions, other people’s perceptions of me, my physical well-being on the day?
- How have the tools we used to understand the situation affected what we saw?
- How might I have acted differently if I was from a Black, Asian, or Ethnic Minority group?
- What does this say about my own biases and preconceptions? How has who I am affected what I noticed or felt was important?
- What might be the perspective of other players in the situation?
- Why is mine different?
- What perspectives are missing from my account?
- What binaries, or “either—or, forced choice” categories have I constructed?
- How have I constructed myself, or my professional role, in relation to other people?
- What do these indicate about the way I am constructing the situation?
- What assumptions are implicit in my account and where do they come from?
- How do my personal experience and beliefs from my social context interact in this situation?
- What functions (particularly powerful functions) do my beliefs hold?
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Achilleos, J.; Douglas, H.; Washbrook, Y. Educating Informal Educators on Issues of Race and Inequality: Raising Critical Consciousness, Identifying Challenges, and Implementing Change in a Youth and Community Work Programme. Educ. Sci. 2021, 11, 410. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11080410
Achilleos J, Douglas H, Washbrook Y. Educating Informal Educators on Issues of Race and Inequality: Raising Critical Consciousness, Identifying Challenges, and Implementing Change in a Youth and Community Work Programme. Education Sciences. 2021; 11(8):410. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11080410
Chicago/Turabian StyleAchilleos, Jess, Hayley Douglas, and Yasmin Washbrook. 2021. "Educating Informal Educators on Issues of Race and Inequality: Raising Critical Consciousness, Identifying Challenges, and Implementing Change in a Youth and Community Work Programme" Education Sciences 11, no. 8: 410. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11080410
APA StyleAchilleos, J., Douglas, H., & Washbrook, Y. (2021). Educating Informal Educators on Issues of Race and Inequality: Raising Critical Consciousness, Identifying Challenges, and Implementing Change in a Youth and Community Work Programme. Education Sciences, 11(8), 410. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11080410