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Masking Inequality with Good Intentions: Systemic Bias, Counterspaces, and Discourse Acquisition in STEM Education

  • Writing Skills StudySTEM Education
  • Categories:Education Theory
  • Language:English(Translation Services Available)
  • Publication date:July,2023
  • Pages:154
  • Retail Price:(Unknown)
  • Size:152mm×229mm
  • Page Views:67
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Feature

★This book won the award for best monograph on writing across the curriculum at the Sixteenth International Writing Across the Curriculum Conference.

Description

In Masking Inequality with Good Intentions, Heather M. Falconer examines the impact of systemic bias on disciplinary discourse acquisition and identity development by asking “How do the norms and expectations of higher education and STEM, specifically, impact the development of scientific identity and discursive skill?” and “What role do societal markers like race and gender play in the negotiation of identity in STEM learning environments?”

Drawing on the experiences and writings of six students from historically underrepresented backgrounds in STEM, each participating in an undergraduate research program, Falconer discusses how programmatic and pedagogical choices can work to either further marginalize students and disrupt their writing and identity development as scientists or create counterspaces—spaces where students can thrive and push back against dominant, oppressive forces. Practical applications for pedagogy, curriculum, and program design are included.

Author

HEATHER M. FALCONER
Heather M. Falconer is Assistant Professor of Professional and Technical Writing at the University of Maine, Orono. She is a co-editor of the WAC Clearinghouse Perspectives on Writing book series, co-chair of the Research and Publications Committee of the Association for Writing Across the Curriculum, and a member of several editorial and regional boards. Her research focuses on the intersections of culture, discipline, and pedagogy, with an emphasis on creating inclusive educational spaces. Her work has appeared in journals including Written Communication, The WAC Journal, and the Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, as well in edited collections.

Contents

Front Matter
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1. The Intersection of Language, Culture, and Power
Chapter 2. Lifting the Curtain: Working With, and Against, White Institutional Presence in Science
Chapter 3. The Psychosocial Costs of Race- and Gender-Evasive Ideologies
Chapter 4. Performing Race and Gender in Science
Chapter 5. Structuring Communities of Understanding and Support
Chapter 6. Building Equity with Counterspaces
References
Appendix. Methodological and Analytical Procedures

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