Internationalization, Internalization, and Intersectionality of Identity: A Critical Race Feminist Re-Images Curriculum

Authors

  • Theodorea Regina Berry The University of Texas at San Antonio, College of Education and Human Development, Department of Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching

Keywords:

curriculum, critical race feminism, teaching

Abstract

This poetry/paper article is a re-accounting, a poetic counterstory in curriculum, of the praxis of an African American female teacher-educator working against internalized notions of curriculum as standards by re-imagining curriculum through the lives of third grade students and her teacher education colleagues.  Using critical race feminism (Berry, 2010; Berry & Mizelle, 2006; Wing, 2003) as her framework, the author will describe how she moves curriculum from internalized to connected, collective, and introspective.  The author will provide her rationale for the necessity of such movements in curriculum and will conclude the paper with a discussion about the possibilities that exist in such re-imagination.

Author Biography

Theodorea Regina Berry, The University of Texas at San Antonio, College of Education and Human Development, Department of Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching

Theodorea Regina Berry, Ed.D., Associate Professor, The University of Texas at San Antonio, College of Education and Human Development, Department of Interdisciplinary Learning and Teaching, 1 UTSA Circle, San Antonio TX 78249

Downloads

Published

2014-05-02